Real Justice is Blind? | Guest: Dr. Ilan Morad | 2/4/19
Super Boring...the Lowest scoring Big Game in History?...it's a Great excuse to get together as a family...watching the game for the Commercials...good, the lame and the lamer..'oh please give it a rest' Washington Post?...5.2 million to produce their commercial...money saved in massive layoffs?...performance doesn't match your promise? ...Venezuela is in the midst of a bloody civil war?...when will the military fold to the new President...Maduro resists...Mexico allies Maduro? ...China, 5G and the New information highway (nightmare)? ...VA Governor Northam admits to 'blackface'...in a Michael Jackson routine?...real justice is blind...LBJ was a dye in the wool, deep seeded racist
Hour 2
Where the media always falls down...lies, lies and more lies?...Normalizing abortion?...because of Roe v. Wade?...offenders, disingenuous?...abortion by the numbers? ...Extremities of the extreme wealth tax rate?...Elizabeth Warren proposes annual tax on ultra-millionaires...never trust a politician when they say a tax is 'just for the super rich' ...Watch President Trump's State of the Union Only on Th BlazeTV.com/beck ...Mover over Izod...North Koran introduces their edible shirts?...2 problems solved with 1 shirt, style and hunger?
Hour 3
A Miracle in Our Time?...Dr. Ilan Morad Founder and CEO, AEBI...The Jerusalem Post Article - "A cure for cancer? Israeli scientists say they think they found one" ...DC or Venezuela? ...How do you spell loneliness = P-I-L-L...loneliness kills...chronic isolation...Remedy: facing ones fears helps fight loneliness? ...Breaking News: Mary Poppins Is Racist?
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Transcript
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the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the glenbeck program my gosh
last night's super bowl was ruled by fear it was ruled by fear
come on because it was boring as snot right
remember when people had the courage to have a wardrobe malfunction remember when people had the courage to do a commercial that was actually entertaining?
Remember when the Super Bowl commercials were about frogs?
Do you remember those good old days?
There were a couple of ads that were okay, that were okay.
One that I thought was funny, one that was a real head scratcher.
But maybe,
maybe it's a blessing in disguise.
I begin there in one minute.
This is the Glen Beck program.
All right.
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Okay, Super Bowl ads.
The only reason why I really watched the Super Bowl.
No, no, no, no, not true.
I watched the Super Bowl because it's a great time to get together with the family.
We had a great time last night.
And we didn't really watch the Super Bowl.
There's nothing.
My wife is a bigger sports fan.
Mary, my oldest daughter, and my wife, are the sports fans.
She, my wife, was was the only one that cared.
Patriots.
The rest of us were like, I don't know, you take that team in
the red, white, and blue, and I'll take the team with the yellow, swirly things on the helmet.
I mean, we really just didn't care.
But you get together because it's fun and you're hanging out as a family and friends and the commercials.
I mean, my daughter, again, who is the fan,
she started talking during the commercials.
And I'm like, Mary,
talk during the game.
And she's like, what?
I said, talk during the game.
Tell me the game.
Shh, quiet.
Commercials are on.
We watched the commercials.
Then when we finished the commercials, we went back into the game and I said, okay, what were you saying?
And she's like, it's the game, Dad.
The game is on.
So anyway, you watch them for the commercials.
And, you know, normally Doritos and Carls Jr.
or Chrysler.
You know, there's there's an unexpected movie trailer.
The movie trailers last night were freaking me out.
All of the movies are like, okay, I don't want to see that one.
But then the Washington Post pops up.
But Tom Hanks.
Now,
for a minute there, you're like, okay,
this is pretty good.
And then you realize, wait a minute.
This is a media commercial, isn't it?
The Washington Post.
Oh, please give it a rest.
Well, that was my first reaction, but I want to talk to you.
If you missed it, here's the very serious commercial from The Washington Post.
When we go off to war,
when we exercise our rights,
when we soar to our greatest heights,
when we mourn and pray,
when our neighbors are at risk.
When our nation is threatened.
There's someone to gather the facts.
To bring you the story.
No matter the cost.
When we celebrate Trump's doom every third day.
When we have our photographers take pictures of the last president so it looks like he's got a halo around him.
Come on.
I mean, yes, it is true.
I'm really torn on this commercial.
Really torn.
Because part of it, well, everything, really, honestly, everything up until the point of the Washington Post.
I like
everything I agree with.
Every bit of it.
You know,
you look at that commercial and you're like, okay,
we do need, we do need a a strong, robust media.
It is what if we're gonna, if we're gonna make it, we have to have knowledge.
We have to know the things that are going on.
Now,
the Washington Post ad
was taken, and they did report on the NFL's decision to reject an ad from AMVATS.
This is a group of American veterans, because it was too much of a political statement.
Oh, really?
Even though the NFL, I mean, do you guys remember you were doing all the social justice crap?
Remember all of that?
I mean, remember, NFL, you were political there for quite some time.
No,
let's leave that aside.
The Washington Post did cover that.
Most outlets were reporting on the fact that the Washington Post dropped $5.2 million on that commercial.
$5.2 million.
Now, people are reporting on that because they're like, well, look at all the layoffs all in the industry.
Well, did the Washington Post, were they laying everybody off?
And business is business.
Well, yeah, but I mean, look at the state of the industry.
Well, yeah, that's what they're advertising about, maybe, possibly.
Isn't that what it possibly is?
By the way, those were the pioneers of the new media.
Everybody who was in the new media was laying everybody off.
You know,
they're obviously miserable failures like the Blaze, because the Blaze went out of business three years ago because we did layoffs.
We were just ahead of everybody else who had half a billion dollars in financing.
They just burned through all the money.
Hello, Vice.
Is this on?
Anyway, Jeff Bezos, obviously doing something right if he can spend $5.2 million
on an ad.
And they even had a conservative in there.
Wasn't that Brett Baird from Fox in that commercial?
So maybe this was an olive branch.
But see, where commercials always fail
is in positioning.
You can't run a commercial if it's not true.
Now, you can come out and say, whoa,
boy, does our pizza suck.
And we get it.
And that's why we're making a different kind of pizza.
And people will applaud that.
People will accept that.
But when your performance doesn't match your promise, that's,
well, some would say it's all false advertising, but it's just a crappy waste of money, really.
Because nobody buys it.
Your performance has to match your promise.
And what your promise is here, is that you're going to tell the truth,
that you're going to be a witness to history, and you're going to help us understand.
And by celebrating Donald Trump's demise every third day,
by coming out and only trying to win, only taking a news story and looking at it from one
way of looking at it, one perspective, that doesn't make you a truth teller.
That makes you a truth-teller to people who believe like you do.
That's not the job of a reporter.
That's the job of an opinion page.
A reporter is to tell you the facts, not what you hope it means, not what you think it means,
just what you know.
And too many people are
blaming talk radio.
Well, that's just opinion.
And they don't realize they've done the same thing.
What is cable news if it isn't talk radio?
It's all opinion.
It's all conjecture.
It's all, well, you know what I think?
That's talk radio.
And you can't blame talk radio.
You can't blame opinion makers.
And having the ones who are
shouting the blame the loudest be opinion makers.
Washington Post, I wish you well.
I hope you watch that ad and say, you know what?
There is something really big at stake.
Really big at stake.
And we better start acting like it.
We better start taking not ourselves so seriously,
but our job seriously.
Our country, our Constitution, Constitution, our very way of life is at stake.
Take that seriously
and take yourself with a grain of salt.
And maybe,
maybe your performance will match your promise.
Never more than 60 seconds away from the show.
We're going to stop for one minute here.
Let me just tell you about the Palm Beach letter.
Bitcoin and crypto not where we thought it would be uh at the uh you know at the beginning of last year for sure um but it is not out and that's the interesting thing here it didn't collapse it it's bubble popped but it pops all the time now all of this technology is being put into crypt crypto and all of this technology is starting to support cryptocurrency cryptocurrency is the future, but now everybody's been burned on it, and they're like, Well,
I don't know if that's even real.
Oh, it's absolutely real.
And you need to learn why.
Before you invest in anything, you need to learn what it is.
And we had to teach ourselves.
I mean, there weren't very many experts out there that you could just dial up and say, hey, can you tell me about blockchain that could really sit down and teach it to you?
Tika Tiwari
was in my office, I don't know, about a year ago, and he was explaining it to us.
It made more sense than it had ever made before.
And we had really worked hard on trying to understand it.
And I asked him, I said, Could you do like a course for this?
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Not an investment thing.
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We break now for 10 seconds, station ID.
We bring Jason Battrill in, who is our head researcher, head writer, really focuses on military affairs.
What is happening in Venezuela?
I mean,
is there anything really going on in Venezuela now?
A lot is going on in Venezuela.
But I mean, with a changeover.
I mean, I keep thinking that this might
be something like 2017.
It's just going to die down.
It's not going to get traction.
But this is different.
I mean, there is an international coalition that looks like they've been planning this for months.
Just this past weekend, the UK, Germany, France, and I think Spain all officially recognized the new interim president, Guaido.
That's huge, because before they were just saying, hey, well, Maduro, why don't you just do some snap elections,
do that, and then we'll see where we go from here.
But Maduro, of course, was very defiant and said, you know, we're not going to be, you know, we're not going to be given an ultimatum.
And so the EU said, okay, fine.
So the majority of the EU fully supports this other president.
Pretty much the entire world, except for, what, Russia, China, Turkey.
Turkey, Mexico.
Bizarrely Mexico.
It's very, very strange.
But the majority of the world now is backing this interim president.
We've got people that are on the ground inside Venezuela that are giving this thing two weeks.
Basically, all they're doing is waiting for the police force and the military to finally flip.
There was another two high-ranking generals that came out in full support of Maduro, which is a very good sign.
This is speeding towards, I mean, it's just now it's just when will the military fold?
When the military folds, this thing is all over.
But right now, thousands upon thousands of people are thinking that a civil war is very, very likely, and they are fleeing across the border down into places like Colombia.
I've been told if you stand on that border, you just stand there and you see the masses of people passing you.
Because of that, human trafficking is skyrocketing in those areas.
It's heartbreaking.
It's awful.
We also have people from OUR on that border
trying to find the trafficked children because people are coming out of the border and saying, you know, this is my child and it's not their child and they're being trafficked.
They're saying they're being sold just out in the open on some of these Colombian streets now.
I mean, just people straight up.
They're not in fear at all.
They're just doing it right out in public.
How is Colombia handling with this influx?
I think, I mean, think about Colombia like you think about like places like Greece or places like Cyprus, like during that, you know, refugee influx.
That's what a lot of people aren't talking about, and that's what the left is not talking about.
But the amounts of numbers, I think it's over 3 million now, are flooding out of Venezuela.
At this rate, it's eclipsing the rate of refugees coming out of Syria and Africa in war zones.
That's what socialism has done to the humanitarian situation out there.
The left will not talk about that.
Three to four million since I think 2014 or so.
Where have they gone?
Colombia, Peru has been devastated, places like Guatemala.
I mean, we see what it did to Europe.
Is this going to happen to South America?
As far as like what's going on.
Destabilization.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
So you have destabilization of South America, which would lead people to start coming toward our border.
I mean, and Mexico is a part.
of this Venezuela mess.
They're backing it.
You know, I wonder what they're getting, honestly, because you have Turkey involved.
You know why Turkey is involved.
The gold is apparently not going to Russia.
Part of the gold, I guess, is going to Russia.
Most of it is being bought up by Turkey.
So these planes that are loading up gold
is actually flying it to Turkey, and Turkey is getting the gold.
China is backing it because China has, what is it, $50 billion?
$50 billion.
$50 billion that they loaned them, and they said, we want that in oil.
But now, because oil has collapsed, that would just, it would just devastate
Venezuela.
I mean, you're just pretty much raping it for the oil.
But that was the deal that Maduro made.
And now China wants their oil.
So they've got $50 billion in there that China doesn't want to lose.
China is also
not happy about the United States.
And we're positioning, I believe we're positioning, tell me if you think this is too far, positioning for
a global war.
And China and Russia are going to be at the center of it.
And China is, I mean, why is no one reporting that China has, is it a destroyer?
No, it's, I,
it's a naval ship.
There's been no pictures of it.
Just our people have seen it.
So basically right on the border, international, the international border, you know, line that goes out from Colombia and Venezuela, there's a U.S.
naval ship.
Actually, John Bolton just tweeted out some photographs from humanitarian aid inside that ship.
But there's also on the other side, there's a Chinese naval ship.
I'm not sure what its capabilities are, but it's supposed to be there to deliver humanitarian aid.
I'm not sure if I completely buy it.
Actually, I don't buy that whatsoever.
I'm sure there is some kind of response force that if Maduro called upon it, it could be utilized.
I don't know.
It might be just there to guard their treasure.
I mean, I've long held that if we defaulted on our loans, okay, if we owe all this money to China and we said, oh, by the way, it's worthless.
We can't pay you back,
they'll just take it.
They'll say, okay, well, we want it in coal.
And, you know, West Virginia, all those coal mines, they're now ours.
Yeah.
And they'll just take it.
And they'll send in the people to work the coal mines.
They don't care.
Yeah.
What's interesting is what China did with Venezuela is exactly what they're doing with places like Africa.
And that's how they're taking over economically.
Did you ever read that book?
It's really good.
It's called like Tales from an Economic Assassin or something like that.
It's this guy that claims to be a CIA operative.
And his job, he was an economist.
And he would go down to places like Venezuela and he would get them basically in massive amounts of debt that they could never pay back.
So then he would hold them, we would hold them hostage.
He claimed that's what we did to Latin America, but China copies a lot of our things that we do.
China is doing that everywhere.
Africa?
I mean, they have just taken over Africa.
Yeah.
And they say, we're, what is it, Uganda that they're doing right now?
Is it Uganda?
They're building these massive things for the Ugandan president, this brand new parliament building and everything else, everything they don't need.
And they just keep taking this free money from China and they're sending in the Chinese workers to do it.
And before you know it,
you are a second-class citizen in your own country.
All of a sudden, China's running everything.
I went down to Liberia recently and I was shocked.
Everything's Chinese.
Medical facilities, hospitals, everything was Chinese.
It will absolutely shock you.
But that's all over Africa right now.
That is why when we talk about
5G, and I wonder if the president is going to talk about this in the State of the Union tomorrow and our relationship with China more than just the trade war.
China and 5G
is critical
understanding why we would fight a new war.
It's for a new Silk Road.
It's for a new road that is all about technology and information and being able to piggyback and ride that information to its original sources so you control it.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.
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I am so torn on this.
I just despise Washington, D.C.
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And to be in a whole room full of them, all of them, is not going to be fun.
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But
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use the promo code beck and you're going to save some cash on that we're at a we're at a um a real turning point here as a nation and i'm i'm anxious to see if the president discusses this at all but we're at a turning point on a couple of things uh first of all we're a we're at a turning point on abortion this abortion thing is way out of control because of my trip it was unexpected my trip up to washington dc we're going to do that abortion show we'll do it for you probably next week.
We were going to do it tonight, but we'll probably do it next week.
We are going to cover some of it today on radio, hopefully, if we get some chance.
But I think
yesterday, now I have a weird family.
Yesterday, as we were watching the Super Bowl, our conversation kind of turned to
we need to have a family meeting.
Things have changed, and we are now at that cliff.
And if we go over the cliff,
we're not going to make it as a society.
We have to stand and not go over the cliff.
And that cliff is clearly marked by
the right for life and the idea of life.
These abortion bills, this hasn't been a slippery slope.
All of a sudden, it was a cliff that New York just went over.
Virginia almost went over.
Rhode Island, I think, is working on it.
And what's the other one, Jason?
Do you know?
Is it New
Hampshire?
Vermont?
Vermont.
Vermont.
They've just gone insane.
Now, there's another clip.
And this clip is
social justice and categorizing people.
And
yesterday, because this was on my mind during the Super Bowl,
I painted something.
It's actually, I put it up behind me.
I don't know if anybody can see it, but
it's social justice.
Could you grab it real quick?
It's a painting, and actually, it's from a scene from an old silent film
from, I think, 1925 or 26.
And the silent film was called The Rat Hole.
And
it is,
I
did this last night
as an
ode to social justice.
And what it is, is a guy who is just trying to move forward.
And in the darkness, all these hands are reaching around him and trying to grab him and pull him down into the rat hole.
And I think that's what social justice is doing to us.
Social justice is
taking us and
pulling us all down into things.
For instance, yesterday, I had somebody at church say,
Do the Democrats not
understand
forgiveness and how life works?
And I said, What do you mean?
And he said, The governor of Virginia,
I mean,
is that right what's happening to him?
And I said, Well, you know, he's a Democrat, right?
Oh.
Now,
it didn't change the story for him, but it did shock him because he just assumed anyone who was being attacked had to be a conservative.
Now,
this governor, if he survives,
it's a Democratic miracle.
He's only going to survive because he is a Democrat, if he survives.
The only reason why we didn't know about this when he was running is because he was a Democrat.
They knew.
I mean, come on, your opposition research, you didn't dig that one up.
They knew.
But the left uses that to destroy people.
But now, because he was, you know, the guy coming out and saying, hey, abortion is neat, abortion for everybody, even after birth.
Well, the right decided, well, you know what?
Two can play that game.
Let's see what's in your history.
And they found it.
And they found him apparently in Blackface or as a Klan member in his college yearbook,
Jason is
with me today.
Jason,
you saw this, and what was your first reaction?
My first reaction is that
I wanted to come to his defense, which really sickened me because I saw what he said over the abortion stuff, and I just,
it was just awful.
But my first thought was, well, shouldn't we come to his defense?
Because this is the exact same tactics that they use for people like Kavanaugh.
I mean, what you did when you were sure he was an adult.
He was in medical school, but what you did then does not define who you are now.
And we cannot keep doing this.
There's got to be a point where we say enough is enough.
Now, when he, you know,
but he blew all that.
He instantly blew all that.
Wait, wait, don't move past this yet.
Don't move past this yet.
Because
this is true.
If you want real justice, not social justice, if you want real justice, you have to be consistent.
Justice is blind.
So it doesn't matter if you're a Republican or a Democrat.
Justice is blind.
So should we be dogpiling on him because of this?
Because it's vile.
It's vile.
However,
you have to remember that now the clan outfit, the black face next to the clown outfit does not fit this category.
But what he said,
and I don't believe, if you would take him at his word, what he said was, that wasn't me.
I dressed as Michael Jackson, and I was in a dance contest, and I did put blackface on.
Well, back in the 80s,
you know, you're dressing as Michael Jackson and you put blackface on.
That's not a minstrel show thing.
It wouldn't have been perceived like that for many people, at least in white America, because
you had no real awareness of that at that point.
It was a different world.
It was a different time.
And by the way, Michael Jackson was busy at the time putting white face on.
He was going the other direction.
So
you could excuse at that time
not the blackface, actual blackface minstrel show in the yearbook standing next to a Klan member.
That's inexcusable.
I mean, imagine, go back in time when you were, you know, in high school or college, dressing as a clan member would not have been cool ever.
At least in my family and with all my friends, would have never been cool.
Right, but do you think that today,
like, but change happens?
No, change happens.
If he could have came, if he would have came out and just said, look, and this is, this is when I was prepared to defend him, when he came out and made his statement, I thought he was going to say, yes, that was me.
I am a new person right now.
Now I am a champion for whatever issue that he's going for.
But, I mean, look at like LBJ.
LBJ was a racist.
Everyone knows this.
Like, he called his chauffeur the N-word.
Like, everyone knows,
there's multiple books that have been written about how LBJ was a racist.
Now, he would not become president in
today's standards.
He would not.
But.
He did a lot for civil rights.
So now they
lift him up as a champion.
You know what I mean?
Personally, I think when you see the results of the Great Society, I think he got exactly what he wanted.
Yeah, no doubt.
I mean, I think he, I mean, he hated black people, he hated black families, he wanted to destroy them.
And I think the Great Society did exactly everything.
Why was he so against it?
And then all of a sudden, he turned.
Yeah.
He turned without a big event in his life, without anything other than we can win.
You don't have those deep-seated
hatreds and then just all of a sudden say, you know what?
I'm president now.
I got to do something good.
I personally think it was sold to him,
you know, in
quiet conversations as, listen, Lyndon, it's not what it appears to be.
Yeah, look,
there's no doubt.
At that point in the 60s, that coincided with the war on poverty.
I mean, from that point forward, the Democratic Party transitioned into this party of, let's create a voter base that is constantly dependent on us.
They always have to vote for us because they have no choice.
We guarantee their survival, so we will create all those votes.
That's when that happened.
Yep.
So
you want to give somebody the benefit of the doubt when they've changed, but that's not what the governor did.
The governor came out and said, I'm pretty sure that wasn't me.
You're pretty sure that wasn't you?
Come on.
You either know it was or you know it wasn't.
You don't dress like that, and your friend is in a clan outfit, or you're in a clan outfit, and you don't recall.
I'm pretty sure that wasn't me.
But I want to play something that he said
when he was asked.
He said, I, you know what?
I did dress in blackface once, and I did Michael Jackson.
It was a dance routine that I did.
It was Michael Jackson.
Now, listen, listen to what he says.
Go ahead.
That That same year, I did participate in a dance contest in San Antonio, in which I darkened my face as part of a Michael Jackson costume.
I look back now and regret that I did not understand the harmful legacy of an action like that.
It is because my memory of that episode is so vivid that I truly do not believe I am in the picture in my yearbook.
So vivid.
Then a reporter asks asks him a question about the Michael Jackson dance-off.
Listen.
You said that the competition in San Antonio was the dance competition?
Yes.
And it was that you danced the moonoff.
That's right.
Are you still able to move?
Inappropriate circumstances.
My wife says inappropriate circumstances.
The guy has no judgment.
The guy has no judgment.
He hasn't changed.
You're telling me that you've changed.
No, look, it was very vivid.
And I did it.
But I'm not that man anymore.
I've changed.
You're in an apology session.
Somebody says, Can you still moonwalk?
And he's like, Well, yeah.
What, honey?
No, I shouldn't answer that.
No, I won't.
Really, I'm really good at moonwalking.
I shouldn't do that right now.
I mean, the guy has zero judgment.
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coming up with the Glenn Beck program in hour number three.
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Back in just a moment.
The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
This is the Glenbeck program.
This hour I want to talk to you about something that we have talked about before.
In fact, it's been covered slightly in the media.
The right media has covered it pretty extensively,
but not in the way that we are going to cover it.
I believe that we are at the point of choosing.
That every single person now has
an opportunity to choose who do you serve.
What's right and wrong.
What side am I on?
There will be no bystanders.
Nobody is going to be, everybody's going to be in one stand or the other.
Where do you stand?
Who is surrounding you?
What are you really supporting?
The time for choosing in one minute.
This is the Glen Beck program.
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The media has all but ignored the abortion conflict.
And even though there's a clear delineation between
what people think is right and wrong,
between left and right, Republicans, Democrats,
usually
the media is all over this.
But because the media is overwhelmingly pro-abortion, and this is such a hard fight to win, they're all but silent, which allows
doubt and lies to grow.
This is where the media always falls down.
Because they decide not to cover something,
lies start to grow on their side and disinformation.
The things that they always claim that we do.
Hello?
It's happening right now.
Media coverage has been almost non-existent for the New York abortion law.
It was significant enough
for the New York Democrats that the World Trade Center was lit up pink for the night.
Yet an analysis by the Media Research Center found that the new law's passage did not get one second of airtime on ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, or MSNBC.
They lit up
One Freedom Plaza or whatever the hell that thing is called and the Empire State Building in pink.
And no one in the media covered it?
The media was only interested in abortion debates if the rights are under attack.
Do you remember the firestorm media coverage 2013 when the Texas State Senate debated a bill to criminalize abortion after 20 weeks?
I know you remember it.
You may not, but once I say this name, you will, Wendy Davis.
She did an 11-hour filibuster in the state of Texas and stood against it, and she was an instant celebrity.
She was the it girl.
After the conservative outcry last week over the proposed abortion rights bill in Virginia, the left's reaction
has been that it's unreasonable to ask Democrats what their threshold is.
What is your threshold?
That's unreasonable.
Well, I mean, we just want to know: is it moments before birth?
Is it right after birth?
When do you consider this a child?
That's really what abortion is about.
Is that a child?
Or is that just a group of cells?
At some point, that's a child, because it doesn't become a child because it does this.
Because
if there's a car accident, if there's trouble, if the mother is ill and wants the child, the child, I want to keep my child.
It's my baby.
I'm having a baby.
At some point, it's a baby.
It's a child.
And if there's trouble, that child can be taken out of the mother through cesarean and the baby can
do that.
So is it a child
before it comes to term?
If it can live outside of the bombs
system?
Is it what, when?
Because you won't answer that question.
I don't know what we're even fighting.
They're making it sound like Virginia delegate Kathy Tran was being attacked last week when Republican Majority Leader Todd Gilbert asked her a question about the late-term abortion bill she was sponsoring.
Listen.
In the third trimester, could a physician perform an abortion if he indicated it would impair the mental health of the woman?
Or physical health.
Okay.
Okay.
So I'm talking about the mental health.
So, I mean, through the third trimester.
The third trimester goes all the way up to 40 weeks.
Okay.
But to the end of the third trimester.
Yep, I don't think we have a limit in the bill.
Where it's obvious that a woman is about to give birth, she has physical signs that she is about to give a birth.
Would that still be a point at which she could request an abortion if she was so certified?
She's dilating.
Mr.
Chairman, that would be a
decision that the doctor, the physician, and the woman.
I understand that.
I'm asking if your bill allows that.
My bill would allow that, yes.
She knows just by answering the question, yes or no,
it doesn't go well for her.
Virginia Governor, the Democrat,
his name is Ralph Northam.
He made comments on a radio show last week defending Kathy Tran's bill.
The accusation that the right is taking Northam out of context, that he was just talking about what could happen if a baby was born and it had extreme deformities.
Let's say it was born with
Down syndrome.
I mean, that's something that the world wants to eradicate, right?
I mean, Iceland has eradicated Down syndrome.
Well, they didn't actually eradicate it.
They've just made sure that anyone with Down syndrome didn't live.
Through abortion,
they have killed any baby that had Down syndrome.
So they've eradicated it just the way the Nazis would have eradicated Jews.
You can't possibly gloss over the fact that the governor was talking about the mother and the doctor debating whether or not to save the child's life after it was born.
It is absolutely unreal.
And then he made a statement.
He followed it up.
which was only released through his communications director the next day.
It doesn't backtrack on the worst part of his comments.
In fact, here it is.
No woman seeks a third trimester abortion except in the case of tragic or difficult circumstances, such as non-viable pregnancy or in the event of severe fetal anomalies.
And the governor's comments were limited to the actions physicians would take in the event that a woman whose circumstances went into labor
attempts to he attempts to extrapolate these comments otherwise, and it is in bad faith anyone who tries to do that and underscores exactly why the governor believes physicians and women, not legislatures, should make the difficult and deeply personal medical decisions.
Okay.
Here's the problem.
In the Roe v.
Wade decision in 1973, facts are really
important.
You're You're not really a child
under the law
because of Roe versus Wade.
You're not a child.
Now, the recent New York law focuses on
the late-term abortions.
91% of all abortions take place under the first trimester.
But it's important to clarify that the New York law and the proposed Virginia and Rhode Island laws aren't actually making abortion policy worse than the status quo.
Because since Roe v.
Wade in 1973, the Supreme Court has barred states from prohibiting late-term abortions.
The Supreme Court won't let them happen.
Roe v.
Wade says states could only prohibit late-term abortions if they have an exception for abortions that would protect the health of the mother.
This is the constant refrain that we hear, right?
The implication is the pro-life side doesn't care about women and their well-being.
In fact, that's what the governor's response was right away.
In fact, if I may quote him, no woman seeks a third trimester abortion except in cases of tragic or difficult circumstances, such as non-viable pregnancy or in the event of severe fetal abnormalities
excuse me
really
is that the case
the health definition goes back to the day of Roe v.
Wade
there was an undercard decision that day
one that I didn't even pay attention it's it nobody knows this it's Doe vs.
Bolton
and the decision written by Justice Harry Blackman broadened the health of the mother.
Remember, it's the health of the mother, according to Roe v.
Wade.
But the very next decision said this: the medical judgment may be exercised in light of all factors, physical, emotional, psychological, familial, and the women's age relevant to the well-being of the patient.
So, wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
All factors?
Well wait a minute, I thought that was new.
That's in the New York law.
No, they're just restating.
They are just clarifying.
They are just letting everyone know that's not a child.
And all factors must be considered.
Physical, emotional, psychological, familial, and the woman's age.
So what does that mean?
Well, I'll show you what it means in action by looking at the numbers of the women who definitely only do this in extreme cases.
We go there in one minute.
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We break now.
10 seconds.
Station ID.
I want to clarify things.
The Glimpic program wants to try to make your life a little easier because you're the one on the front lines, and your friends are saying, That's not true.
There's not that big of a deal.
It's not that big of a difference.
That's not what it means.
And you have to know the truth.
The Democrats are always chasing the health of the mother exception, right?
But in reality, protecting a mother's health is rarely given as the reason for an abortion.
It does happen, but it's very rare.
With the New York law, the pushback is the Republicans and pro-life nuts are just overreacting.
Essentially, this is exactly what the Democrats are saying.
No one really wants third trimester abortions, but because we care for women so much, way much more than you do, we have to leave the door cracked open to abort the fetus just in case of the mother's health or life is ever threatened.
But what the defenders of the law are being disingenuous about is that they know that 46 years of higher court decision have backed them up on this enormously broad health provision that basically encompasses anything the doctor is willing to sign off on.
So they already have have permission.
Now here's another argument.
The right is to obsess with late-term abortions after 21 weeks.
It's just a tiny percentage of overall abortions, around 1%.
91% of all abortions happen in the first trimesters before the end of the 13th week.
7% are performed at 14 to 20 weeks, and only 1% at 21 weeks or later.
But that 1%
still means 15,000 babies.
That's a lot of babies.
Now, this comes from a academic study, 2013 School of Medicine, University of California in San Francisco.
So it's not exactly a conservative review.
Let me quote from the study.
Data suggests that most women seeking late terminations are not doing so for reasons of fetal anomaly anomaly or life endangerment.
In other words, Democrats are constantly crying about late-term abortion rights should exist to protect the mother's health, yada yada.
But in this study, 94% of the late-term abortion seekers reported that some things slowed them down up until the very end
for abortion.
None of them involved personal health problems.
94%.
Here were their excuses.
I didn't know I was pregnant.
Now I find that hard to believe, but okay.
Trouble deciding about the abortion.
I couldn't decide, I couldn't decide.
And now that I can feel it moving around in me and feeling it kick and I know it's a baby,
now I want to abort.
Disagreeing with the man involved about the abortion.
Not knowing where to go for an abortion.
We need more funding for for Planned Parenthood, I guess.
Difficult getting to the abortion facility.
Raising the money for abortion and related costs.
Difficulty in securing insurance coverage.
The study found that there were five overall categories of women seeking late-term abortions.
One,
they feared raising the child alone.
Two, they were depressed or using illicit substances.
Three, they had a conflict with a male partner or domestic violence.
Four, they had trouble deciding.
Five, young and never been pregnant before.
Those are the reasons
that
people kill their baby in the last term.
A lot of Americans don't realize how expansive the court's protection of abortion has been.
The New York law and the ones that are pending in other states is just a reaction to the fear stoked during last year's Brett Kavanaugh hearings.
And the left thinks the Supreme Court is about to shift back and dial the wide-ranging abortion rights that the left has enjoyed for 46 years.
Specifically, they are afraid that the Supreme Court will decide that the Constitution allows states to protect unborn children, or that it at least allows states to offer more protection than they currently do.
We are at a point of choosing.
And the choice is really, really clear.
It's a child right before it's born.
There's no way it could be more healthy for the mother mentally to have the child poisoned in the womb
full term
have the baby die inside of her carry that dead baby around for three days and then give vaginal birth to a dead child
that cannot be more mentally healthy
It's certainly not for the soul of all of us.
This is one of those things that we have to drop our partisan lines on, and we have to ask each other gently to come back and back away from the cliff.
This is insanity,
and it only gets worse from here.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.
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Tomorrow night, Blaze TV Live, we cover the State of the Union address, 7:30 Eastern, live on Facebook, YouTube, or Blazetv.com/slash Beck.
This is the Glen Bay program, joined for a few minutes here by Jason Battrill.
Coming up in about a half an hour, we are going to talk to the founder and CEO of a company in Israel, Dr.
Ilyan Murad, who says in the Jerusalem Post last week, my company will have a full cure for cancer within a year.
I've got some questions for him because that's an outlandish statement.
It seems on surface.
But
you'll have to decide for yourself.
A lot of people are coming out and saying that's impossible,
and it might be, but we are entering a time period where I believe in the next 10 years, cancer will be cured.
And so will many other debilitating diseases that we
never thought would go away.
I think we are on, again, a threshold of something glorious and also at the same time, something terrible.
We have two people now in Congress that
have proposed extreme wealth taxes.
And Jason, I just want to see if this sounds familiar.
Congresswoman Omar from Minnesota.
She has proposed an extreme tax rate on America's top earners, suggesting that they pay 90% in order to pay for the multi-trillion-dollar programs that everybody in the Democratic Party wants.
She had that one up, Ocasio-Cortez's 70%, obviously.
So 90% is the next logical choice.
The new green deal that would cost $49 trillion over the next 10 years.
Wow, $49
trillion.
Now, how much money have we spent on the war on poverty, on all of the things that we have done since, what was it, 1967, 68?
69?
69?
Since we did the Great Society
under Johnson, how much money have we spent on the war on poverty?
Since 1969?
Just a little over $20 trillion.
So chump change.
Since 1969, 20 trillion.
How much have we spent on all of the wars put together, combined?
Since the Revolutionary War until today.
Add them all up, $7 trillion, since the 1700s.
$7
trillion is what we have spent.
$20 trillion on the great society.
And in the next 10 years, Democrats want to spend $49 trillion.
And they do point out that, you know, the rich people have to pay their fair share.
You know, it works so well for France when they did it.
Oh, it works so well for, oh, Venezuela.
For Venezuela as well.
Okay.
I'm going to bring this back to Venezuela here in a second, but I want to show you this.
Okay, so somebody else has proposed an outrageous tax, and that is Elizabeth Warren.
She wants a wealth tax.
She wants a wealth tax of
how much, what is it, 50%
of the wealth tax, I think.
Now, how does the wealth tax, how does the wealth tax work?
Do you have any idea?
You have to make over, I don't know, a certain amount, I would say.
$50 million, she said.
That's got to be a lot of people.
Yeah.
Nancy Pelosi may be one of them.
So
$50 million you have to make
or have wealth of $50 million.
This is the difference.
It's not an income, it's a wealth tax.
So, if you have wealth, and that is jewelry, holdings, homes, whatever, at 50 million dollars, you're a private company, you have to pay that wealth tax.
But you have to pay that wealth tax every year.
Now, if I have, let's just say, I have 50 billion dollars, and that wealth tax is
let's just use 50%.
No way it could ever be 50%,
but let's just say it's 50%.
I pay my wealth tax of 50%.
What do I have left next year?
I have wealth of 25 million.
So let me pay my wealth tax of 50%.
The third year, I have 12.5 million.
You see the problem?
Within five years, you're gone.
Everything's gone.
And
under her proposed tax, the numbers have been run, and it will be a destruction of America in 10 years.
There will be no wealth left.
But it also goes into something else, the law of privacy, the right to privacy.
Do you know why we have such a strong right for privacy?
It actually came from birth control.
Birth control was something that you just didn't do.
Nobody, you can't, you're a doctor, you cannot advise about birth control.
And this is when we were extraordinarily religious.
And everybody said, you know, this is for procreation only.
So the rhythm method, I don't even think could have been taught back then.
And so a doctor named Griswold, he was up in Connecticut, and he started telling people and giving them advice on
how to,
you know, prevent birth, how to use birth control, how to prevent with a condom.
So the religious people up in Connecticut said this is a violation of the law and they wanted it to stop.
So it went to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court created our right to privacy.
How could the state outlaw the use of a condom in marriage?
How could it enforce it?
It would have to know, would you have a policeman come into the house and inspect?
Would you have to find out if anybody's house had a condom?
Would you have to track people?
How would the state know?
You have a right to privacy.
What happens in your home, you have a right to privacy.
It's where, we've always heard this, get the federal government, get the policeman out of my bedroom.
Okay?
Well, Well, what happens to your right to privacy when you have to write down every piece of jewelry that you have?
Everything that you own, the state would know about.
And by the way, just to remind you, you can never trust that it's just going to be the super rich.
The super rich.
Let me just remind you that the income tax in 1913 was supposed to be just for the super rich.
It was supposed to never be more than 7% at wartime and only 1%
on the richest Americans.
Within a few years, literally four, it was up to 70% tax.
And then for most of its time, it was at 94%
in the last century.
Democrats now want to raise that back up to 70%,
the numbers used by Woodrow Wilson.
That's kind of a problem.
Because what happens is, you take the wealth tax and an income tax, and you have that much, and it's all going to support a big state.
What happens when there is an economic downturn?
Venezuela.
That's what happens.
If you remember right, what is the first thing that Hugo Chavez did?
He nationalized the oil, right?
Gonna nationalize the oil.
Going to take all that money from the oil.
Then what happened?
Things were bad, but not like they are now, until what, Jason?
Oil prices went down.
And Maduro couldn't cut the size of government.
So they just went into debt and started printing money.
They went into debt with people like China, who China now they owe $50 billion to.
They're never going to be able to repay.
And China will go in and take the oil fields.
Mark my words.
China will go in and take oil fields.
We have this amazing thing.
I'm anxious to hear the president tomorrow.
If there's anything real there,
what is he going to do on the border?
What is he going to do about
taxes?
Are Are we actually
we need clear-cut choices between socialism and freedom?
And it's not socialism like you have in Sweden.
It's socialism that you have in Venezuela.
Because we already have the debt that we can't pay back.
Now we just want to take everybody's wealth and make it worse and increase the amount of spending.
How's that going to work?
Tomorrow night, I'm going to be in Washington, D.C.
I'm going to be doing a Blaze TV live event.
I'm going to go to the State of the Union.
Oh, my.
You used to be with me all the time, Jason, because you were one of my protectors.
I don't think I could be in a room that I would want to be in less than that room.
Surrounded by Nancy Pelosi.
And who's the congressperson that is bringing the illegal alien yeah I'm not sure who it is but yeah yeah they're bringing an illegal alien in
to embarrass the president is there any is what's just crazy any other criminal you'd say we're going to bring this bank robbery he's going to be at this time at this place you'd you'd arrest him you'd arrest them you'd arrest them
i don't know
the problem is the guy worked for donald trump that's why that's why uh they're just using donald trump tactics but i don't think donald trump cares.
I don't think he cares at all.
And I'm going to be above
the Congress
as they reach out for his hand and try to get a selfie.
All of these people who hate him.
And then this, that.
I wonder if.
Do they have like a sneeze card over the edge?
Because I'm on the edge of the balcony.
They have sneeze cards.
Or maybe I should bring a pocket full of pennies and just throw them at Congress Congresspeople all through the event.
Anyway, we're going to be covering the State of the Union address tomorrow night, 7:30 Eastern Time.
Facebook, YouTube, or Blazetv.com/slash Beck.
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This is the Glenn Beck program.
You know, there's a...
There is a solution to every problem, and maybe socialism's time has come.
Communism's time has come.
Because communism and socialism always ends in starvation, right?
Well,
North Korea has solved the problem.
North Korea has just released a line of shirts.
A line of shirts for men that they claim can be eaten to avoid starvation if necessary.
I am not making this up.
An Australian graduate at
Kim Il-sung University in North Korea first reported on the unique fashion trend in a column for a news site, North Korean News.
His article
did a review of a men's fashion magazine released by the country's Clothing Research Center.
Inside, it features a button-up dress shirt, and this is what it says.
This clothing is made from artificial flannelette fabrics composed of trace elements such as high-grade protein, amino acids, fruit juice, magnesium, iron, and calcium.
As clothing worn by people engaged in sailing, exploration, or mountain climbing, it can be eaten to avoid starvation in the event that food has run out.
That's amazing.
On the other side, there is a caption that says, clothing dissolves in water,
which kind of makes me a little, you know, if you're climbing and exploring, what's left of your shirt by the time you get up.
It could get embarrassing when the rain seats during rainy season.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Of course, it would make all of the movie scenes where the two lovers are standing out in the rain kissing.
It would make it, they wouldn't have to go inside and get their clothes off.
You know what I mean?
It's just, oh, we're naked.
let's go
i think we've really sold short you know how you know the the how you know the innovation in socialist countries usually innovation comes from capitalist countries right but here here they've solved two problems yeah you're looking stylish and you can eat
can you imagine you imagine eating your shirt after you've climbed a mountain in it
now there's some good eating they'll be they'll be gonna be figuring out ways to eat the walls pretty soon.
They're eating their homes.
How horrible is that?
That's their big innovation.
Thank you, North Korea.
New clothing that you can eat to avoid starvation.
Another fine, fine product from communism.
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Back final hour of the radio program with a cure for cancer?
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Our cancer cure, quoting, will be effective from day one.
We have,
we believe,
in a year's time, a complete cure for cancer.
This came from a company out of Israel.
We talked to the CEO about his total cure for cancer, even the possibility
in one minute.
This is the Glen Beck program.
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Dr.
Ilyan or Ilahan Murad, welcome to the program.
He is the founder and CEO of AEBI.
i it is an israeli uh company are we talking to you from israel sir
yes hi hi how are you sir
great
um
tell me
you're getting some pushback on uh a claim that your company made i think last week uh and it's it's a stunning claim we believe we will offer in a year's time a complete cure for cancer can you tell me
Yeah, sure.
First, I want to clarify some things.
We're talking about a
concept of curing all kinds of cancer, but it's not one molecule like some of the critics I heard.
It's a family of molecules and it's a personalized medicine.
Each cancer patient would give us a piece of his biopsy.
And after a short analysis, we would know exactly the profile of his specific cancer.
and this cancer patient would get the perfect match of mutato which is the the name of this kind of molecule that would kill his his cancer.
So again it's not one molecule it's it's not a magic bullet.
Every person would get his own
fitted mutato.
Now
when we say cure all kinds of cancer,
we're not going to do that in one year because
we start from one and then we would expand
the whole family of mutatos to all cancer patients.
So when we're talking about a little bit more than a year, we mean that the first mutato would come to the clinical trials and there we'll be able to
cure patients actually.
So this would be only the first one.
And this first one would address the most common cancers, the lung cancer, colon cancer, and head and neck cancer.
And of course among these cancers not everyone would be uh able to enjoy the first mutato because it would be have to it it would have to be specific to the patients.
But later on we develop more and more uh kinds of mutatos, but eventually in a few years we would cover all kinds of cancer.
Again, what we what we mean by by a uh curing uh cancer patient,
we don't mean that we would have an approved drug.
This uh process takes uh between seven, ten, maybe twelve years from the beginning of the clinical trials.
We're not talking about that.
We're talking about starting
treat start treating cancer patients and there in the clinical trials we'll be able to cure them.
And of course you know what ha you know what happens in in cancer clinical trials.
They s they they start with two groups.
One is a controlled placebo group and the other one gets the treatment.
And the minute they see that the treatment helps because it's a deadly disease,
they stop the placebo group and start giving
the drug to the other group.
And then you can add more and more patients to the clinical trials.
So actually, you can treat and cure your cancer patients in the clinical trials and not wait until you have an approved drug.
So you say you're - have you tried this on any laboratory animal yet?
Because you're a year away, you say, from human trials.
Yeah, we tried it on mice.
But, you know,
I say myself that cancer was
was
cured a thousand times on mice so this is not the point it's it's easy to show that mice they respond well to to any kind many treatments that the theory that that behind this concept is what is so strong and what is the theory
okay the theory is like that
you know we started when we started the thinking about how how how how are we gonna cure cancer, we we wanted to understand what what makes cancer such a devious creature?
Why why does it uh always come back?
And why is there so many side effects?
So we thought a lot about this subject and then we remembered what happened with uh a long time ago, like uh three decades ago with uh with AIDS.
If you remember
uh if you got AIDS, it's it was a death sentence.
Correct.
And then they then they started uh giving uh drugs, developing drugs, and the drugs worked, but only for a little while.
Then the virus mutated because, you know, HIV is a very mutagenic creature.
So
after a very short time, it mutated and then the drugs stopped working anymore.
But then they came up with the idea of the cocktail.
And
from then until now, for more than two decades, people who take the cocktail are not dying from AIDS.
Remember Magic Johnson, he lives more than 25 years now with AIDS.
I mean, he's not an AIDS patient.
These these guys are not AIDS patients anymore, they're only carriers.
So the virus for two decades cannot uh get over the treatment.
And and why is that?
Because it's a it's it's not attack on one target, it's uh it's a attack on several targets simultaneously.
That's why it it uh it it works so well.
So we said why not uh use this strategy to um to cure cancer?
Because it's uh actually it's the same.
You know, HIV is very mutagenic, cancer cells are very mutagenic.
And when they use one drug, it used to work only for a little while.
The same thing.
So why won't we do the same and and do a multiple attack on cancer cells and get the by the same strategy the cancer cells won't be able to escape the the therapy.
Okay, this is one thing.
Now we thought about what about the side effect?
You know, chemo is very, very um has a lot of side effects because it's not specific.
What about the
Yeah.
So actually it's poison, yeah.
So I'm not talking about chemo, I'm talking about very specific drugs like antibodies.
Antibodies are very specific.
So how come there's a side effect with antibodies that sometimes are not so easy on the patient?
So we started thinking about it and it's obvious.
You know, cancer cells evolve from normal cells by acquiring mutation, more and more mutation, until they become cancer cells.
So the same
proteins that cause the cancer, they exist on other cells, not cancer cells.
So when you give a drug that is very specific to a cancer target, the same target exists on other cells that are not cancerous.
So this
antibody goes to the cancer cells, but it goes also to non-cancer cells and gives the side effects.
So we said how can we
how can we solve this problem?
How can we make the molecule, the drug molecule, specific not to the target, but to the cancer cells?
And it was actually the same idea.
If you do multiple targeting, but not in a mix like in the eight cocktail, but connect them together, we have what we call the avidity effect.
The more targeting, the more targets that you aim at, if they are connected together, the more specific the drug becomes and the lower the concentration of the drug that you have to give to the patient in order to
treat it.
So if we do, for instance, triple attack,
then we would have to use a very low concentration, and this concentration won't harm
other cells that are not cancerous.
So in one package, in one uh kind of treatment, you get both world the benefit of both worlds.
First, the cancer won't be ab uh be able to escape the therapy, and second, you won't have uh such a dreadful side effect.
Okay, so you have uh we have uh
we uh let me uh let me add something.
We added another thing.
So we added to this complex, we added other other I mean we use peptides as
to target the cancer targets.
So we have what we call targeting peptides that target the cancer targets on the cancer cells.
And we added toxic peptides.
Now what it does is this is what we call a Trojan horse strategy.
You know, the cancer thinks that it gets something good, it interacts with the targeting peptides, and then it pulls in, it makes internalization, and then the whole mutato, which what we call this molecule, the whole mutato goes inside the cell, and then the toxic peptide kills the cell from within.
So it's exactly like the Trodden horse.
So
we have two effects.
First, the targeting peptide, they inhibit the cancer from the outside and
makes it the cancer pull them in,
and then the toxic peptides kill it from within.
So together
the drug is much stronger.
And it doesn't allow it to mutate because you've killed all of it.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So, let me ask you:
you're getting a lot of heat for this, and people say this is impossible.
You can't do any of this stuff.
This is just trying to get attention for the company or whatever.
Why did you make this announcement
so early on?
What gives you such confidence that before human trials that you have the cure?
Okay.
You know, we have a very strong uh theory behind it.
And, you know, we started this project four years ago and we didn't uh it we we didn't want to to uh to advertise it because we were uh afraid that uh um you know uh someone would steal our our ideas.
So until we had the the patents uh advanced enough,
we didn't want to publish it.
Then, last year we started publishing it
by getting into international conventions.
And
we had the best scientists and
people
high-ranked in
big pharmas.
Nobody had a bad word to say about it, and they all were very enthusiastic.
And even people were waiting for me from one year to another to see what advancements we make.
So,
nobody could argue with me about the theory, nobody.
And
I'm looking everywhere for something that someone
would have to say something bad about it, and nobody can.
So it's a very strong theory.
Now,
people are advertising, like publishing articles and so on.
So nobody comes to them and says, hey, why'd you do that?
We want to show people what we do.
So we go to
international conventions and we want people to know about it.
So
we were looking for,
we were, we wanted, we wanted to publish this story.
We didn't know that it would make such a big echo all over the world.
Well,
Doctor, I appreciate it.
Actually,
we didn't know.
It was just
a small article.
I didn't get it that it would be such a big story.
Well, I appreciate it, Dr.
Morad.
We'll be following this and looking for your company to make big moves, and hopefully, your theory pans out.
But, you know, when you make the claim that we've got the cure for cancer, I think that's more than a story in one newspaper.
The world tends to listen, and I hope that indeed you are correct.
Thank you so much, Doctor.
You're never more than 60 seconds away from our show.
I want to explain why that was important in just a second.
We'll come back to that.
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10 seconds, station ID.
Well, I didn't understand a damn word that doctor said, so
I don't know about anybody else.
I mean, I understood what he was saying, but I don't, I mean, I don't, I don't know what the.
I'm going to admit something.
My doctorate of humanities does not actually make me a doctor.
So I admit it this one time I admit it.
The reason why I brought him on the air is because the claim of curing all cancer, curing any cancer, is a pretty big deal.
And he's getting heat on this, and it may be deserved.
I don't know.
I mean, he's done it on rats, but I liked his answer on rats.
You know, anybody can cure cancer on rats and mice.
They're pretty easy to cure.
Rat cancer is really pretty easy.
Who knew?
Who knew?
Human trials are entirely different.
And everybody sets out in human trials thinking this is the one.
He's just another guy who says this is the one, but he may be on to something.
And here's why I brought him to the table.
It seems
crazy to say
cancer is going to be cured by 2030.
MS will be cured by 2030.
Cerebral palsy may be cured by 2020 or 2030.
I mean, that seems nuts to say that.
It sounds even crazier to say most disease will be eradicated by 2030.
But that's the truth.
The truth is, and it seems like it's flying planes,
but you know, flying cars, but it's not.
You know, we've been since the 1939 World's Fair in New York, we were promised flying cars.
Flying cars
are not happening.
I mean, maybe Uber gets, but it's not really a flying car.
You know, you still got to go to like an airport place, and it's like an air taxi.
Okay.
I want a flying car that, you know, drives.
And if I'm in traffic, I'm like, you know what?
And I lift up above everybody else, and I'm like, see you later, suckers.
That's a flying car.
That's what I want.
That's what I was promised.
That ain't happening.
But technology is changing so fast.
Things are moving, especially when it comes to medicine, that you have to start making your mind nimble again.
You have to start realizing that we are on the verge of miraculous things.
But then we have to decide what are our ethics on those miraculous things.
Do you know that they're growing sheep in bags now?
Jason, did you know that?
No, I haven't heard of that at all.
Yeah,
I think it's sheep.
Sheep or goats?
What's the difference?
Except one really freaks me out.
Sheep are cute.
Goats, they freak me out.
I don't know why, but their goats are spooky.
Anyway,
they're growing them in bags now.
You can take a fertilized embryo and grow it in a bag.
So,
you know,
not too long, you'll be able to grow people in a bag.
Take the embryo, fertilize it, genetically splice it, get it exactly right, throw it in a freezer bag.
I know it's a little more complex, but back off, Jack, I'm a doctor.
What's the market for bag grown goats?
Is that like a high-demand thing?
No,
no, I think what it is is
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I was going to speculate, but then I thought, nah, it's a growth industry.
Yeah, it's a growth industry.
I have no idea.
I absolutely have no idea.
But the point is, is that when we get to the point to where we can genetically splice, we can do what Dr.
Mengele was trying to do.
He was trying to wipe out disease.
He was trying to wipe out out a super race, or he was trying to wipe out all undesirables.
He was trying to create a super race, a genetically superior race with genetically superior brains and brawn.
That's what they were trying to do.
What is the difference between what we're trying to do now and what they were trying to do then?
Well, you could say, well, they had their own biases.
Well,
I want to give you a couple of things.
Do you know that they're now working on a pill for loneliness?
They now may have found, they say, the genetic makeup of anger.
They may have found the genetic markers for
things that make people criminal.
They're even starting to say that even your political bias might be genetic
well we get to that point um
i guess the mangela thing starts to come back doesn't it whoever is in charge
you're listening to glenn beck lifelock
35-day government shutdown Cybersecurity professionals now say, oops, this is a problem.
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Join us tomorrow night.
We cover the State of the Union dress unlike anybody else.
7:30 Eastern, commercial-free, Facebook, YouTube, or Blaze TV.
Joined by Jason Battrill today.
This is the Glen Beck program.
I'm on my way to Washington, D.C.
I'm going to be in Washington in our Washington Bureau for the Blaze,
and I'm going to be covering the State of the Union.
I'm actually going to the State of the Union, so I'll be in the belly of the beast tomorrow, and I'll let you know what that feels like.
And we're covering it live beginning at 7.30 Eastern Time.
And it's commercial-free.
And you can find it on YouTube.
You can find it on our Facebook page.
Or if you're a subscriber, you can go to Blazetv.com.
But it's another Blaze Live event.
And we'll all be there.
Coverage is hosted by
oh, for the love of God, Eric Bowling.
Thank you.
And Eric is going to be hosting it.
I think part of it is going to be at the Trump Hotel.
I think the, like the later part of the coverage is, I don't know.
But
all I know is I have to be in the Capitol.
I'd rather be in Venezuela.
I really would rather be in Venezuela.
Anyway,
you know, we were talking about science here a few minutes ago, and
scientists are now working on a pill for loneliness.
Now,
I want you to listen to this and tell me
this seems good.
I know know there had to be people who were listening to me in the last break when I said, hey, when they come up with, you know, genetic responses or whatever genetic reasons, you're a conservative or you believe in God and we can just remove those things.
You know, how do you feel about the experiments now?
And I know there had to be people that rolled their eyes.
But listen to this.
This is from The Guardian.
Loneliness is part of the human condition.
It's a primeval warning sign like hunger or thirst to seek out a primary resource, connection.
Millions of years of evolution have shaped us into creatures who need social bonds in the same way that we need food and water.
And that is true.
Over millions of years,
we have come together and we realize that if we're not in a group, we're in trouble.
It's why we immediately kind of we have clicks in school and then we're likely to join mobs if things aren't right.
We want to be with the group of people that look like they're going to win, and that just comes from the days of sticks and stones.
It's hard to compare our collective loneliness against that of previous generations because we haven't been measuring it consistently.
But recent estimates suggest that anywhere from 22 to 75 percent of American adults are persistently lonely.
A number of culture-wise wide structural changes might be to blame.
More Americans live alone than ever before.
Fewer of us are marrying or having children.
Our average household size is shrinking.
In many cases, this means that
there wasn't the path to a nuclear family.
Western societies
have demoted human gregariousness from a necessity to incidental.
We're spending more and more time
on our own, and technology is pushing us there.
The trouble is that chronic loneliness doesn't just make you feel terrible, it is actually bad for you.
Loneliness elevates your risk of developing cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative disease, cognitive decline, metastic cancer.
Also, it weakens the immune system, making us more susceptible to infections,
and it can also ossify into a fixed state that changes brain structures and processes.
So what are they going to do about it?
Well, they are looking now to find a pill for loneliness.
And I want to quote the article and the doctors that are working on this.
We are looking for technology
that will cure
loneliness because technology has sanded away the necessity and inconvenience of interacting with other human beings.
But if we can come up with an oral dose of a compound and they explain what it is, it will affect the region of the brain responsible for threat detection, emotional recall, and the anticipation of unpleasant reactions.
If we could successfully reduce the alarm system in the minds of lonely individuals, they might just reconnect.
Does that sound like the plot of every really scary
futuristic movie like the, what is it, the giver?
The giver, yeah.
You remember that?
Yeah.
I mean, that's what it is, isn't it?
Everybody's on a drug.
Because emotions are dangerous.
Emotions are dangerous.
And we're looking at this.
We have doctors now that are looking at this.
That is frightening.
So that suppresses the, it said your threat detection as well, and the ability to perceive certain things as dangerous.
So if you see a fire or you hear the fire alarm, you'll be like, eh, threat detection, emotional recall, and the anticipation of unpleasant reactions.
Your
normalcy bias would go through the roof.
Would go through the roof.
How many people would die just from that?
Yeah.
Not anticipating a problem.
We've become such a culture and society of
looking for pain avoidance.
When I never forget, one of my drill instructors was like, pain is transformative.
Pain lets you know either when to go away or it changes you eventually into something a lot more stronger.
I mean, and it's the same for, I mean, there's probably a reason if you're feeling lonely, you should maybe look for more human interaction.
You know, like if you, if you constantly,
I'd rager that most of the people that have made the biggest impact on, you know, on
society as a whole have probably gone through considerable pain and failure before they got to where they got to i don't think you can
i don't think you can actually be a fulfilled human being and realize your potential without serious pain no doubt i mean i i just don't know i mean i've asked that of successful people and they've all gone through their own thing
and they all agree.
I've asked that from people who I think are really, really,
I think, balanced people and successful emotionally, and they all say the same thing.
No, if I hadn't have gone through this,
I wouldn't have
been here for that and blah, blah, blah.
There is no bad.
It's
what you do with it that makes it bad or good.
Yeah.
I've had the privilege of protecting a lot of famous people and a lot of big-time business people.
And I'll never forget this one conversation between one really big-time CEO,
top of all Forbes list type guy,
and someone that he had to let go.
And the guy that he let go was like, you know, did I screw up too much or whatever?
He's like, no, I don't care about that.
He said that the reason he was being let go because he said famous people are really successful people like the position he was at.
You have to be a big time risk taker.
You have to be a big time risk taker, but you also accept the fact that you're also going to fail a lot.
Now, I don't care how many times you failed, but if you're never willing to take the risk because you're scared of the failure,
I can't do anything with you.
And that was just so profound to me because so many of us will not, we don't want to have that pain.
So we won't even take the risk.
So I talked to Bob Goff on Friday.
Bob Goff is just this amazingly pleasant human being
that just looks at the world incredibly different.
And he's going to be one of our podcasts coming up soon.
And I talked to him on Friday, and we started with one of the most profound things that he said.
If you,
Bob, if you had to sum up your
the meaning of your life, the message of your life, what would it be?
And he said,
What would it be like if we all weren't afraid?
Think of that.
What is it that you're doing right now or not doing
because you're afraid?
Are you going to a job right now that you
despise?
You just despise.
But you're afraid if you don't,
it'll never be this good.
You're afraid you won't find something better than this.
You won't get the pay.
If you don't get the same amount of pay, that maybe your family is just going to fall apart.
What is it that you're afraid of?
What is it?
And what would change if you weren't afraid?
Fear rules the world, either fear or love, and fear, especially right now, rules the world.
What would you do differently today?
I was thinking about putting this in front of me every day and just asking that question question once a day on the air for myself and for you.
What would be different?
What would you do
if you had no fear?
Now they'll say in the loneliness pill, that's what they're trying to do.
They're trying to take away fear.
No, no, no, not that way.
Not numb to it.
You know it.
You just don't react to it.
People of great courage, people who have done great things.
Eisenhower,
when he went on to the beaches of Normandy, he was terrified they were going to lose.
He wrote the blame.
He took all of the blame.
He wrote a letter that was supposed to go out in case we lost.
And it was like, look, I did my best.
We all did.
Don't blame it on the boys.
Blame it on me.
I take 100% of the blame.
He wrote it before a single boat or plane took off.
He had fear.
He knew what the consequences were.
But he pushed through it anyway.
And he did it anyway.
Life changes for all of us if we would just do that one thing.
Sponsor this half-hour is Goldline.
There are a couple of stories that I pulled out today that I think are
astounding.
When it comes to gold, there's a couple of things.
Venezuela is moving gold down to
Turkey.
But also, there is a story out today that talks about how
more gold
has been gobbled up by the central banks than any time since 1972.
That's kind of a big deal.
That's kind of a big deal.
Central banks know things are changing and they're gobbling up because the U.S.
dollar, they all believe, is going to lose its reserve currency status.
When that happens, your world and my world change because the only reason why our dollar is worth so much is because the rest of the world has to have it to buy oil.
Once that petro dollar goes away, once the rest of the world says, you know what, I'm not going to bet on the dollar anymore.
I'm going to go for gold.
Your dollar is worth less and less until it is worthless.
Please, please do your own homework.
We are at the precipice.
This is the beginning of, we're just approaching the tippy top of that roller coaster.
And when it goes click, click, click, click, click just before it comes down.
That's, I think, where we're at.
Call Goldline now, 1-866-GoldLine.
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The New York Times giving you news that you can use.
The classic family film Mary Poppins, racist.
Now, this is in a story from the New York Times, written by an academic who accuses Dame Julie Andrews of blacking it up?
He writes,
When the magical nanny, oh, there, okay, now it sounds like news.
Thank you.
When the magical nanny, played by Julie Andrews, accompanies her young charges, Michael and Jane Banks, up to their chimney, her face gets covered in soot, but instead of wiping it off, She just powders her nose and cheeks even blacker.
This might seem like an innocuous comic scene if the novels didn't associate chimney sweeps blackened faces with racial caricatures.
Even though that's not in the movie.
When they are singing Step in Time
the naval buffoon Admiral Boom shouts we're being attacked by the Hottentots.
They have to fire the cannons at quote quote those cheeky devils.
But if we're sitting there watching the movie, we're in on the joke that these aren't really black Africans, they're grinning white dancers in blackface.
It's a parody of Black Menace, writes the New York Times.
It's even posted on a white nationalist website as evidence of the film's racial hierarchy.
Oh, well, if it's been posted on a website, you know it must be true.
Fans of the New York Times, even readers of the New York Times, apparently racist.
One wrote in the comic section,
I think this might be a reach.
She was friends with a chimney sweep.
She went out and she danced with him and she got soot on her face.
But maybe I'm not remembering it correctly.
The author posted this line
online after his article was published.
I want you to know the chief reason I wrote this article was the hope that Disney executives would read it and take another look at the forthcoming Dumbo remake and ask if there was anything maybe just a little bit racist that they might want to rethink before it hits the big screen.
All right.
Well, Mr.
Pollock,
I would like to just
comment here
that your racism is sickening.
I noticed that you wrote the chief reason.
Do you have a problem with Indigenous Americans?
What is that dig all about?
We all know, no matter what your answer is, Mr.
Pollock, you have some sort of hatred for indigenous peoples.
I don't know what it is, but it's not welcome around here.
Off to Washington, D.C., for our State of the Union address.
That will be tomorrow at 7:30.
Blaze coverage, unlike the other coverage you might find elsewhere, it'll be commercial-free, Facebook, YouTube, and Blazetv.com.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.