Best of the Program | Guests: Pat Gray and Brittany? | 4/2/19

43m
Best of the Program | 4/1
- Only Losers Want To Change The Rules? - h1
- Uh-Oh Pat Gray is Offended? -h1
- Fun with AOC? -h2
- Meet Brittany, The Ambassador for Avocados? -h3
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Transcript

Oh my gosh, there's an avocado shortage.

It's an avocado shortage.

Panic, everyone.

Podcasters, please keep calm.

Carry on.

I know there's going to be a shortage of tequila and avocados, and we'll get into that here in just a second.

It shows you how not elitist the left and the media really is.

Also, the cutting of funding for the Special Olympics by the New York Assembly.

You'll never guess what they did with the money on that one.

Alyssa Milano decides that the Bible is a great place to,

you know, talk about

abortion.

Okay, you see if you can make

sense of that.

Also, AOC, she says the easiest way to get rid of global warming, of course, cow farts, but she's not talking about, you know, getting rid of the cows.

We just need to change, quote, the cow grain

to something that causes less farting for our cows.

I honestly think if you just listen to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on today's program, you can claim to have a doctorate from any university in America.

Really, because I'm smart enough.

I feel if you listen to enough of her,

your IQ continues to drop.

But we'll find out on today's podcast.

You're listening to

the best of the Blenbeck program.

Yes.

So you got the duct tape?

You got it around your head?

Okay, good.

Because I'm just going to give

a couple of quick highlights.

Alyssa Milano says she loves God

and then quotes the Bible to push abortion.

What

part of the Bible

pushes abortion.

If I had told you earthly things and you do not believe, how can you believe if I tell you heavenly things?

What?

What the hell is it?

What?

Oh,

that's the abort the kid part of the Bible, right there.

That's the kill your kid in the womb part.

Abort away.

I knew you in the womb.

If you read the New International Version, it says abort away.

Yeah, it says, shout your abortion.

I don't know

how that works, but it's not going over well for Alyssa, and we'll get into that here in just a second.

Also,

today they are set to unveil in the in the Senate

a constitutional amendment to abolish the Electoral College and allow for the election of presidents by popular vote.

You know who's for this?

People who keep losing.

You know who's for this?

What if we change the rules?

Yeah.

Then we can't win.

We can't win.

We got to change the rules.

Here's the thing.

The Electoral College is so important and no one is defending it.

Here's why the Electoral College is really, really important.

Not to make sure that Republicans win, so that you do not have one party, because that's what it will be in the end.

It will be one party.

And the one party will only have to care about the big cities.

They will only care about the population centers.

They will not care about the farmers.

They will not care about Iowa, Nebraska, Idaho.

They will not care about any of these states where the population is low.

They won't care really about Rhode Island.

And you can tell there's a deep concern by Democrats about that Russian hacking thing.

Because if you had a national popular vote, they would only need to find one weak place to be able to run up the tally and be able to

manufacture election results.

In fact, one of the reasons why they say that the Russians were not successful is they didn't understand all the arcane local laws for each.

They didn't know how to break in.

It wasn't all the same systems.

Let's just say there was a place like, I don't know, let's pick a place that is so far away from corruption when it comes to voting, it would be ridiculous.

Chicago.

Oh, okay.

Okay.

What would happen, Stu,

if the Electoral College were abandoned and Chicago, I know this is a stretch, was a place where you could just manufacture fake votes.

It would be, I don't know, like Chicago elections, except across the nation.

Is that what you want?

Because all that would happen was i if you got more votes in Chicago, let's say they did it to Chicago, Detroit, you know, and uh

you know, I don't know, Los Angeles.

Well,

if you don't have the Electoral College, it doesn't matter.

Those three towns,

if they just inflated the numbers from those three towns, you would push over the election.

It's popular vote.

You win.

The Electoral College is insurance against election fraud.

I mean, it's only one of the things it does really well, but it does that really well.

I mean, a foreign power to try to penetrate the Electoral College, they'd have to know which states they had to push in.

They'd have to find weak points in each one of the states or areas.

They'd have to, I mean, it's impossible to do because of the Electoral Electoral College.

So everything that is in the Constitution now that everybody is hating, everybody is hating, it takes so long, that was designed that way.

And it was designed that way to stop corruption.

It was designed this way to stop people from having this emotional response and become New Zealand.

By the way, have you heard New Zealand?

You know that they took away all the guns, right?

Well, yeah, they banned.

They banned semi-automatic rifles.

And they told everybody to turn them in.

You know how many turned in?

How many were turned in?

I mean, I would assume all of them.

I mean, the government said it.

Well, I know, but that's, I mean, that's tens of thousands of guns.

I mean, more than that, right?

I mean, they have over a million guns in the country.

I don't know how many they needed turned in, but

they got most of them.

They got 34.

34,000?

I mean, that's not a gun.

No, they got 34.

100?

I mean, that's not a gun.

They got 34.

34.

They're three and a four.

Can you imagine this happening in the United States?

I love, I mean, we talk about these laws.

Can you imagine if they actually passed a gun confiscation in this country?

Nobody would be turning them in.

You would have,

out of four, what is it, 400 million, 390 million guns, I bet you would have,

oh, maybe,

let's be generous.

250,000 guns turned in?

Let's be generous.

I mean, 34.

And

this is what all of these crazy laws, these arcane laws in the Constitution, this is why they're there.

Because what happens?

People say, oh, my gosh, we've got to react.

We've got to do something.

The politicians do.

And the people with an agenda.

We've got to do something.

And so they do it.

They do it quickly.

They do it on emotion.

And what happens?

It's not where the people are.

The people were supposed to turn in all their guns.

34

came in in New Zealand.

I mean, is that just the first day, I assume, but still.

No, I think that was the first week.

It was 34.

It was 34.

It's amazing.

It's a massive failure.

I mean, this is what these things happen.

I mean, this bump stock thing that just has gone through.

They're talking about the United States, we're going to have to supposedly destroy $100 million worth of items that have been purchased legally.

Now are illegal, so we have to destroy $100 million worth of stuff that people spent their money on.

I mean, just that.

Forget even the gun, the Second Amendment concerns there.

Like,

that is so sad.

How do we live in a country where that can just be done?

I mean, it's just, it's absolutely madness what's going on.

So the Electoral College, what the Electoral College also does, besides, you know, confuse our foreign enemies on how to hack into election, confuse our enemies inside that want to steal elections.

The Electoral College also does something else.

It forces people to listen to the states with smaller populations.

You're supposed to listen to them because this is the entire thing.

The Constitution was put together when we had 13 different countries.

These colonies looked at themselves as totally free and independent.

It was like France and England, and we said, okay, how do we get together?

Well, we had to do some things that if the EU would have done, it probably would have worked.

But we said at the beginning, it was very different than it is now.

Look, we are all separate and independent.

And the big states, especially the slave states that have these gigantic populations, they said, yeah, we want to vote for,

we want popular vote.

Well, the little states said, wait a minute, we won't have a voice at the table.

We can't have, and there won't be anybody who's speaking up for us.

Don't worry, we're going to take care of a couple of things.

First, what we're going to do is we're going to give you the House, which represents the people.

And so you'll have enough people.

You'll have the equal number for your population.

There's your popular vote.

It's in the House.

But then we want to make sure that every state is represented.

And the states are not...

are all treated equal.

So the House may say, hey, I want to do this, and New York might be the leading arbiter of this, and they have the most people in Congress, so they can get that thing passed.

But then it's got to go to the other chamber.

It's got to go to the Senate.

And the senators were directly elected not by the people, but by the state governor and their legislator.

So their legislators came in and said, we want this guy to represent us.

So now you have the people represented.

Then you have the power of the local state represented.

So you have a balance there.

Then you have the president.

But how do we pick the president?

Because the president could, in the end, just side with the House and

no

qualm about it, no problem with it because he doesn't even have to go to Delaware.

He didn't have to go to Rhode Island because they meant nothing.

As long as he was in New York and Virginia, he'd be fine.

So they said, okay, to balance this out, we're going to have an electoral college that will be the actual vote that every single state is going to matter.

If you get rid of the electoral college, if you feel like a flyover state now, the only time you do matter is when

they're forced to put their plane down in the center of the country.

And they're forced to go to the coffee shops and the waffle houses and everywhere else to talk to you.

The minute you get rid of the Electoral College, you don't matter.

Only the cities matter.

Only the the states with the biggest populations matter.

You will not see them in your rural town.

They will not care about you because you won't, you don't have the power.

So every little state,

every town that isn't a metropolis,

you no longer count.

The best of the Glen Beck program.

Hi, it's Glenn.

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Thanks.

Pat Gray joins us.

He's just fresh off his taping.

Live podcast happens.

His taping happens every day between 7 and

7 and 9 Eastern.

7 and 9 Eastern.

So you don't want to miss that, the Pat Gray radio roundup.

You can find that, Pat Gray Unleashed, wherever you find podcasts, or you can listen to him on the Blaze Radio Network as they tape it live every day.

Pat just said something

incredible to me that he just saw Rated R movie last night.

Yeah.

It was unplanned.

I did.

Wow.

Was it

offensive?

Oh, man.

All of the.

People talking about life and whether babies should live or not just was

wow, you don't want anybody seeing that.

To be fair, there were those points where they manipulated those clumps of cells.

Right.

And that was a lot to make it look like they were babies.

Babies, yeah.

I mean, I don't know if those were Volkswagen parts.

So, you know, Pat really does not see Rated R movies.

When we first met each other, it was the first Rated R movie I've seen since Silence of the Lambs.

You saw Silence of the Lambs.

Yeah.

Seems like an odd choice to just dip your feet into the rated R pool.

Does it there?

Yeah.

Yeah.

Well, I didn't realize,

you know, how

sincere Pat was on rated R, and I didn't realize how

far away I was from,

you know, shocking.

When I saw Silence of the Lambs, I came back and I'm like, Pat, you got to see it.

He's like, I don't see his stuff like that.

And I was like, no, no, no, this is.

There's nothing wrong with this.

It's just great.

Yeah.

It's really, really great.

And he was like, no, no, I don't.

And I'm like, there's nothing.

It's like,

you see this stuff on TV.

I look over like 20 minutes into this movie and Pat is just white.

And he's like,

I don't think I've seen any of this on TV before.

So he's

so anyway.

So he hasn't trusted me on a rated R movie and he doesn't go to see any of them.

But this is not a a rated R movie.

No, it's not.

The one thing you see is,

you know, there's some gross material because abortions are involved, and you see things go through tubes.

But, man, to deny

the

experience, I think is a mistake.

It's a powerful movie.

It's a well-acted movie.

This is from the people that did God's Not Dead, which I didn't like.

No, come on.

This is

fantastic.

You didn't didn't like it?

I didn't like it.

You didn't like it?

I did not like

it.

I hated it.

Yes, okay.

Thank you.

I hated it.

I walked out of it, quite honestly.

And the producers are friends and everything else, but I walked out of it.

I thought it was horrible because it was so preachy, and everybody who was a villain was

a super villain, and everybody who was good was, you know, Mother Teresa.

And I just hated it.

I think they must have learned a lesson from that because

unplanned is not that way at all.

The only one that might be a slight over-the-top exaggeration, I don't know this, but the, the, you know, the initial Planned Parenthood director seems a little.

And I've asked Abby about that, and she has said, Glenn, that is absolutely word for word.

All the things she said.

All the things that the director says.

I mean, she's like, I swear to you, we did not hype that.

That is who they are and what she said to me.

Man,

this will really, I mean, it'll rock your world about Planned Parenthood and

it'll remind Christians, I think, how important this fight is because we gave up this fight for so long.

And now, now that we're, we've joined the fight again, it seems like we've got momentum.

This movie could add to that momentum.

It's that important.

If you get people to go to it, you've got to get your kids to go to it.

You've got to get,

this will raise up a whole new generation that will see things clearly.

Because that scene, that 20 seconds

of where she's turned.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Oh, my gosh.

So impactful.

And what the doctor says, and that's a quote, is outrageous.

And it's a quote.

It is

phenomenal.

Let me ask you one thing because I was thinking about this last week.

If I was listening to the nice show and you heard us talking about unplanned, it would be one of those movies that I would go, I should go see that.

And then my wife would say, do you want to go see a movie or something?

What about that movie Unplanned?

And I would go, I don't want to go see that.

Yeah.

Because it seems like a dirge.

It seems like a movie you're supposed to go see.

Okay.

Did you feel that way?

Not at all.

Did you feel that way kind of going in?

A little bit.

Yeah.

And leaving?

How did you feel?

Uplifted.

Crazy, isn't it?

Yeah.

It's weird.

You're

also felt kind of entertained.

I mean,

it's also.

It's a good movie.

Yeah, it's a good movie.

It's a good movie.

It's an amazing story, too.

I mean,

some of the reviews have been negative, which they're always negative on

any movie that has a message like this, obviously.

But, you know, they're bashing it for ridiculous things

on the message.

But it's like you look at this movie and it's like, at the very least, you have to acknowledge it's an incredible story, even if you don't care about abortion at all.

The fact that

a woman who became Planned Parenthood's national employee of the year

is currently telling you how bad abortion is.

Who had two abortions, a woman who

was the director of a clinic that performed thousands and thousands of them.

Was the best performing in the country?

I mean, she was, she, I don't know if you heard the podcast, but she talked to me about

being the best at talking people into abortions.

They learn, they teach you at

Planned Parenthood.

And it's, it's, once you,

if people could just get their arms around, this is not compassion.

This is business.

This is all business.

And when she said,

you know, I would talk people into abortions because they taught us how to do that.

And it sounded like almost like a used car salesman.

And she said, I was the best at it.

Whenever we would have a tough patient coming in that really didn't want to have an abortion, but wasn't sure.

We made no money on prenatal care or anything like that.

The only way we can make money is if we are aborting the child.

And so she said, I would be called called in.

I've got a tough patient here.

They don't want to necessarily have an abortion.

She said,

I would go in.

And she said, this is how I sold it.

She said, look,

you know,

you're in a tough situation.

And I know you're fighting right now,

but you believe, if she said, if it was a religious person, she would say, you believe in a just God, right?

Yes.

And

you're worried that God doesn't, God's going to condemn you.

Yes.

What kind of God that you know in reading the scriptures is a God that would not understand his precious daughter and be able to forgive and understand where you're at.

He knows right where you're at right now.

And she said, I would break down the barrier.

And then she said, I would say, so look,

here's what I can do for you.

This ultrasound has just cost like $500.

She said, if you leave today without booking the abortion,

I have to charge you for the ultrasound.

But if you book the abortion today,

then I will roll that into the price of the abortion so you won't have that extra payment.

Just like a car sales.

Exactly right.

Throw in the cup holders, I'll book the abortion.

Right.

And

she said she would always look at them and she'd say, so is there any reason why we shouldn't book this today?

I mean, that.

Wow.

Well, yeah, let's see.

You're murdering my baby.

Yeah.

And I want to think about this a little bit.

So you're in a vulnerable situation.

Imagine if a car dealer was doing that with vulnerable women at the time.

Any bank, you want to talk about predatory loans.

Anybody that was doing a transaction when you are that vulnerable.

Yeah.

And you're saying, well, I don't know.

Well, you know what?

I could make this happen and this happen, but you have to do it right now.

Well, and as Abby said, they lie to you.

They lie to these women.

They lie to the girls.

You know, some of them are 12, 13, 14, 15 years old.

They said the youngest she did was 11.

11?

11.

With or without parental permission.

I believe without.

And that person has now made a movie

that, you know, supports the pro-life cause.

And they said she's the only one.

In the movie, they say she's the only defector they've ever had.

And that role.

Which is amazing.

In that role.

Yeah.

And they thought, you know, what was weird is when you watch this movie and they first bring her into the POC, products of conception is what that really stands for.

But they used to jokingly call it Pieces of Children, which is what it is.

Right.

And their security code was baby.

That's what their security code was.

You can remember the number.

Just remember, it's just baby.

I mean, they know exactly what they're doing.

So pieces of children, they would joke.

And they brought her in, and I asked her, I said,

why weren't you stunned by little feet and little heads and little arms?

Because you have to count everything after an abortion.

You have to make sure every piece is there.

Because if it's not there, it's inside the woman's body.

Right.

And so it caused all kinds of problems.

So they have to put them together.

They have to reassemble the baby.

And she said, I don't know why that didn't bother me.

She said, I understood.

that it was a baby, and so I didn't, I don't know why.

She said, but it was always my choice.

And she said, but

once I saw the ultrasound and I saw that baby fighting, she said it became human to me.

She said, because that was the natural instinct.

She said, that's what I would do.

That's what all of us would do.

And here's this lump of nothing.

If it didn't fight that, it would have just been a lump.

But because it sensed trouble and pushed away from it, she said, all of a sudden, it became very human.

It became alive to me, and I knew exactly what it was.

Especially when they do it all the time.

The name of the movie is Unplanned, and if you haven't taken your kids to

see it, please do take your kids.

Do you think what age appropriate?

What age do you think?

I think it depends on

PG-13 is probably the right rating for you.

It's not a Jesus film.

I would say that it's not a film.

No, no, not at all.

And I would say, even even PG-13,

it depends.

Like,

I think Rafe could have seen that when he was 11-ish, maybe, 12.

Cheyenne's too sensitive.

Cheyenne is 13, about to become 14,

or no, she's 12, about to become 13.

And

I still wonder.

I think that would

bother her.

I mean, a lot, deeply.

Yeah, but 13 is the.

It certainly shouldn't be R.

And so there's nothing in between those two.

I mean, PG-13 is the, you know, you still have to make, it's, again, it's parental guidance, you know, above 13.

You have to go.

I just got a letter from a guy last night who said, I took my daughter, she was 18,

and she said, he said, you know, we're Catholic.

We raised them to believe, you know, that this is life.

And she said, he said, my, my daughter

just doesn't believe that, believe that that's a viable choice for people to make.

He said she didn't want to go and didn't want to go, didn't want to go.

The last minute said, yeah, you know what?

I'm going to come with you.

And he said, while it hasn't changed her mind yet, he said it has completely changed the conversation.

And he said,

this has opened a door.

And I think that's what will happen for anybody who is dead set.

and has made their mind, they're going to have to start to cling to things that they know are not true.

They're going to have to start justifying in their mind because they're forced to see it for 20 seconds.

Or you just have to believe everything in the movie is a lie.

Right?

If you're already set that this is a woman's right to choose and it's a reproductive choice, blah, blah, blah.

You just have to believe that everything they say about Planned Parenthood and how they operate is a lie.

Which again, you're talking about doctors and nurses and directors.

All these people are in the movie.

Right.

They didn't ask them, get a report and then recreate it.

The people who are starring in some of these roles are the actual people from the clinic.

Yeah, in that scene, the doctor that performed that is a doctor that's performed tens of thousands of abortions.

Has he turned?

He turned.

Oh, wow.

And that doctor that's in that movie?

That's the doctor that did that.

And the nurse that's in there with her

also performed tens of thousands of abortions with Planned Parenthood and also turned and left.

So you know the medical details of that are accurate.

Yeah.

I mean, like they were there, they did this.

I was told that when the doctor walked in before they shot,

he looked at the tray of instruments and he rearranged them exactly the way they would be

if you were doing an abortion.

He was like,

I just want this scene to be right.

I want this to be accurate.

I don't want anybody to be able to say, oh, they wouldn't use that or they didn't do this.

He said, he arranged all of the instruments exactly the way they're laid out for Planned Parenthood doctors.

And he knows because he was one for a very long time.

This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.

Hey, it's Glenn.

And if you like what you hear on the program, you should check out Pat Gray Unleashed.

His podcast is available wherever you download your favorite podcast.

You may have to excuse me for a few minutes during this hour, and Stu will just kind of sit in.

I have to come and go for a...

a neurologist

conference call.

My daughter has

been having testing for about a year,

and

so we get some of the results back.

So I'm going to be kind of in and out a little bit through this

hour.

I want to talk to you about AOC.

Now, I'm going to play this audio.

And farmers,

farmers, don't laugh this off.

Okay.

She knows what she's talking about.

Listen.

We need to innovate on our technology.

You know, obviously, like I had a staffer, you know, released a document to talk about cow flatulence, but

which is an issue.

I just want to say,

but it actually is an issue when it comes to contributing to methane.

But that doesn't mean you end cows.

It means that we need

what it means is that we need to innovate and change our grain,

our cow grain,

you know, they feed in these troughs.

We need to

really take a look at regenerative agriculture.

Like, these are our solutions.

Now, I'm enjoying this so much.

I know nothing, okay?

I do have cattle.

I do raise cattle.

But when I say I raise cattle, no, I don't.

I show up for like four weeks out of the year where we have this farm and this ranch.

Other people are raising the cattle.

I'm not.

I just show up and I'm like, yep, there's my herd of cattle.

We call them herds, right?

There's my herd of cattle.

I know nothing.

You mostly raise cattle from a Big Mac rapper.

Exactly right.

Okay.

All right.

I am all at.

No cattle.

That's the way you would say it in Texas.

Now, here's the thing.

Even I know

that we're not feeding the cattle cow grains.

We're not that we're giving them cow grains.

Yes, some cows will be raised on corn.

So you're saying corn are the cow grains?

Cow grain.

Other than that, you're pretty much alfalfa.

If you were somebody that is looking for an all-natural cow,

a what?

A grass-fed.

I've heard that terminology before in Whole Foods.

Okay.

Everybody want, oh, you want a grass-fed crawl.

Well, cow, what are they doing?

They're eating grass.

They're going out and they're eating grass.

Alfalfa, they love.

It's like catnip.

That's not, there's no grains.

You're not sitting in a trough eating out of a grain.

Why do they have them then?

Why do they have the troughs then?

Why?

Why?

Why do they have them?

You have no answer for that.

You have no answer.

The cow grains are the things that go into the troughs.

It's obvious.

Now, I'm sure that these big farms are maybe, you know, throwing the cow grains

into these big troughs,

but I don't think I'm going to take

anything she says

is like taking anything I'm saying

as gospel.

Well, my issue is they shouldn't be making the grains from cows if they're feeding them the cows, right?

Like, that's just like, it's just like, you know, it's cannibalism, basically.

If you're going to feed cows cow grains, don't make them out of cows.

That's she has a good point there.

But other than that,

she seems to be a tad misled.

So we're feeding cows cows?

Well, cow grains, right?

I'm assuming they're made of cows.

I don't know all the facts.

I'm not a person.

I just love this.

I mean, the other part of this is, first of all,

they don't, generally speaking, eat that way.

There's no such thing as cow grains.

Another issue is also flatulence from cows is not really an issue.

It's belching.

is really the issue.

It's coming out the other side.

That's the methane problem.

So she doesn't understand that.

And I love the part where the audience cracks up because she's like, I mean, the answer to that is not to end cows.

That's not a punchline.

That is from her document.

She said until we, like the document they released, they're acting now as if it was mistakenly released as a draft document.

Again, if you ever got, Glenn,

an important document to you handed from your staff that was a draft and not finished and looked like that, would any of those people have jobs the next day?

No.

No, of course not.

It was an absolute disaster.

Then they released the draft document, which wasn't a draft document.

No.

Because if they had a draft document, what would they be doing today?

They would have had the final one out, right?

Like, where was the final FAQ about this bill?

We never got one.

Right.

Because it wasn't a draft document at all.

It was intentionally, that was it.

So, but the punchline that everyone laughs at, they're laughing at her.

It was her document that said, well, we're not going to end cows.

That was her.

They're mocking her own document.

And I don't know that she even realizes it at this point.

I don't think so.

And by the way, the cow grain,

the only cow grain, and farmers, please correct me, the only cow grain that is being fed to them would be corn.

Corn-fed beef.

But that's everybody wants grass-fed beef.

So she's...

Well, that's what she's saying.

She wants to adjust their cow grain.

Right.

So are we supposed to have, like, I don't know, anacids or gas X in the cow grain?

Are we supposed to look for something else?

That's essentially what she's proposing, right?

I mean, if you want to take her seriously, what is it that you're going to feed a cow that they're going to eat that is good with their digestive system?

What are you going to feed them that they eat?

I mean, I don't know about you, but I could drop carrots on the floor all day long.

My dog's not going to eat it.

I I have something yummy, my dog's going to eat it.

I have chocolate on the floor.

My dog will want to eat it.

And I'll be like, no, you're going to die.

I mean,

what is it that we could feed these cattle that you think will stop the methane?

What is it?

What is it that you could do?

And by the way, cow.

That's why you feed them cow.

I didn't think it was methane.

I thought it was CO2 that was the problem.

Well, methane

is an issue.

Now, it is more potent of a greenhouse gas than CO2 is.

It's in smaller amounts, and it also leaves the atmosphere much quicker.

So it is part of the equation when it comes to...

I've read the report, and I've heard it a million times, but why is this?

Is it because it's just in

there are more cow farts than there are cars and chimneys?

Well, I mean, the UN did say that

the meat industry is responsible for more of the CO2 problem than all the transportation

every transportation sector in every country on earth combined.

Now, there are disagreements with that report, but I mean, they can't disagree with it because they're the UN.

I mean, you can go through and pick

that report apart pretty well, but they can't because the UN said it.

And

that is their standard of proof needed to adjust the entire world economy.

That's why we were always so fascinated of why it it took Al Gore a couple thousand days before he decided to quote-unquote go vegan.

Whether that's actually true or not, I have no idea, but he at least claims it now.

But it took him thousands of days after that report to actually do it.

Why?

Why, Al?

Because again, as we pointed out yesterday,

the actions do not match the words.

If they actually believed the world was going to end in 12 years,

it would not be cow grain time.

They would be much more concerned about these things and doing things that were different.

I will tell you that this all goes down to culture.

Remember what Barack Obama's wife said right before the election, right before she was taken off of the road?

She said, Barack knows we got to change our traditions.

We have to change

our language.

We have to change everything.

This is part of it.

By getting you to stop eating beef,

that is very American.

I'm a meat and potatoes guy.

That is the West.

That is American to raise and eat cattle.

Now, you know,

you want to say it's for different reasons.

That's fine.

I honestly do not think that this is anything different than just changing all of our traditions.

They have disconnected us from history, and now they want to change our traditions.

Once you change the traditions, you've got nothing left.

You really have nothing left.

I mean, most people don't even know why we have, why do we have summer vacation for kids?

Why do schools have summer vacation?

Do you know?

I mean, the amusement parks need to make their money summer.

No, it's because it was the summer months where the kids needed to work the farm.

Okay.

So once it got into spring and summer,

that was the time to plow and to plant and everything else.

And the families needed the the kids back at home.

So everything

about us, why do we have daylight savings time?

Right.

Yeah, it was also the same thing.

For the farms.

Okay.

We don't need it anymore, but it was for the farms.

So everything we have

that they are slowly dismantling is also slowly dismantling our story and where we came from.

You know, you dismantle the Christmas tree.

Okay, well, that takes out everything that we know about Christmas, about Europe, about Germany, St.

Nicholas, all of these things, all of these traditions mean something to us.

And the more you take them apart,

the more empty you are as a culture.

And some of these changes are good.

I don't want to go back to a place where I need to farm all summer.

No, no, no.

I'm not saying that.

I'm just saying that

everything, they are taking all of our traditions apart.

And I'm not talking about daylight savings time or, you know, I'm just saying

everything is for a reason, okay?

Everything is here for a reason.

It's because of where we came from.

They are slowly erasing absolutely everything that has made us meat and potatoes people.

What does that mean?

Meat and potatoes people.

When I say that to you, that means a plain talking,

a farmer, hardworking, a guy who just calls it like it is, a meat and potatoes

Get rid of cattle.

Get rid of the meat and potatoes.

Say it right.

End cows and cow grains.

Okay, yeah, well, and the cow grains.

Well, we didn't want to get rid of them.

We just have to change the cow grains into something

new, magical grain that doesn't make you

toot when you eat it.

You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.

Oh man, oh man, oh man.

And then we have, of course, we have Betto in the news.

We have Joe Biden in the news.

And we have Brittany on the phone.

Hello, Brittany.

You're going to shut the border down now?

What did you say?

Are you going to shut the border down now?

Let me ask you this.

What about brunch?

What do you mean, what about brunch?

Let me ask you this.

What tops toast?

Jam, butter.

You're gonna put butter with all the cow grains?

You're just gonna put butter on the toast?

Well, yes, I am.

These are the sort of questions I've been working on with my organization, Socialists for Avocados.

And I'm a Socialist for Avocados?

Yes, I'm a campus activist.

And I heard a little bit about your show last night, about Betto.

Yes, yes.

We did an expose on Betto

and who he really is and what he really believes, which seems to be nothing

First of all, I heard you say that and it's just wrong people

you in particular

Said something about how you he's not Hispanic, which is no, he's Irish no, well, he's not his he's this is such a crazy comparison.

He's not as Hispanic as a real Hispanic person

But he's much more Hispanic than your average white Irishman.

So wouldn't that be cultural appropriation?

I don't think it's cultural appropriation at all.

And then you went into his allegations of him being a drunk driver.

Yes.

Yeah.

First of all, he was caught one time drunk driving, okay?

One time.

And that's your and I hear you.

Well, he tried to leave the scene.

He tried to leave the scene.

I heard your spin on it.

I watched the show.

I mean, this guy was plastered all the time.

The fact that he only got caught once just proves he's an excellent driver.

Okay.

All right.

Well, sure.

Maybe he drives slower and more more carefully when he's drunk.

And then you can, I've heard you're talking about Joe Biden.

Yeah.

I have first-hand experience with Joe.

Just one hand or two?

You know what?

I would be honored.

to be an unwilling participant in a Biden facial grope or hair inhalation.

You would be

honored to do that.

But I was working at a coffee shop and Joe Biden used to come in all the time.

And you make him sound so creepy.

Right.

And you make him sound so awful.

But

I didn't see that at all.

This is a man who helped his community.

And a lot of times he was working with students, tons of students from the community.

And I don't know if they were his daughter's friends, but he would always bring in lots of young girls, and they would sit down.

And

you could tell they were having problems.

He was helping them.

They kind of had a glassy-eyed, distant look to them.

And they would come in day after day after day in the mornings, right?

And, you know, there are lots of them, but I never saw the same one twice.

It was always a new one.

And I thought it was very interesting because the only person I ever saw him with more than once was Jeffrey Epstein.

And

he's weird.

Can he leave Miami?

I don't know.

I'm not.

We're going to move on.

Thank you so much.

Brittany, let me go to Allison in Florida.

Hello, Allison.

Allison on line one.

Yes, go ahead.

I am here.

Hi, how are you?

Very good.

I was calling because you were speaking about the Electoral College, and I've never, ever understood the argument.

Well, we, you know, Hillary got more of the popular vote, and Trump would have lost if we had had the contest based upon the popular vote.

The argument to me seems so completely ridiculous because if the If the contest had had different rules, both contestants would have played by different rules.

It makes no sense to say

she got more of the popular vote.

That's almost like looking at the Super Bowl and saying, well, our team didn't get as many points, but we did hold the ball longer.

It makes no sense to me whatsoever.

Right, Allison, thank you for your call.

The problem is with this, you would have to play by different game, but without the Electoral College, you are talking mainly about cities and the major population centers, and we see not a lot of those are real, real red.

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