Praying for Asteroids? - 6/22/18
May the 'Space Force' be with you...NASA's plan to avoid Armageddon?...FEMA asteroid deflection? ...Justice Elena Kagan has been surprisingly 'moderate' ...Glenn bores himself to death? ...Desperate 'pretending' media attacks First Lady Melania's jacket ...California leading the way...in psychopaths?
Hour 2
Just three berets from a socialist revolution?...NFL team holds LGBTQ inclusion summit? ...Bill O'Reilly says it was a 'bad idea' for Melania to wear jacket with these words...Time Magazine has become Mad Magazine...Bill recalls times spent with Charles Krauthammer at Fox News...America has trouble getting 'honest' news
Hour 3
Sen. Mike Lee joins to discuss President Trump's retreat on separating families and the growing humanitarian crisis at the border...assumption of 'racism' is being used...'legal' immigration is harmed in all of this...the Senate blocks Lee's bid to stop Obama water rule; why? ...Glenn reviews the movie 'Ocean's 8'...shares some fun facts about that giant necklace...brace your expectations
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Transcript
The Blaze Radio Network
on demand.
Glenn back.
Okay.
I have some bad news, okay?
But
I think this bad news actually is kind of good news.
All right.
Now, just hear me out.
Giant asteroids are coming towards the Earth, and they're going to destroy us all and kill us all.
NASA has created a plan to stop it so we don't all die.
The plan
does not include Bruce Willis at all, you know, and a crew of roughnecks, you know, landing on an asteroid and blowing its smithereens with a nuke,
which begs the question, if that's not part of the plan, what's a potential space force actually for?
I mean, I'm just saying,
are we preparing for an invasion?
Because that would be fun to just think about now.
I mean, it wouldn't be fun when it actually happened, but wouldn't it be fun?
I mean, we're starting to hear all of the stuff being released, you know, by the Pentagon about
all of the aliens that have visited us for a while.
And maybe that's what the Space Force is for, because we're all going to have to unite against an alien race.
That is just fun to think about.
I don't want to live through it, but it's kind of fun to think about.
Anyway, yesterday, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy released a report titled the National Near-Earth Object Preparedness Strategy and Action Plan.
Well, I love the catchy title.
So
it does sound like government bloat.
Sure, sure, but let's actually look into it.
Besides the title being an enormous waste of words, let's just call it Armageddon, the Armageddon Report.
Okay, the report is 18 pages of steps for NASA and FEMA to take over the next decade to prevent big asteroids from clanking into the Earth.
Now, you might ask yourself, why FEMA?
Well, you know, in case the NASA part falls apart and they don't, you know, stop the asteroid, then we got FEMA.
You know, FEMA is the, holy cow, looks like Cincinnati just got squashed.
And that's when FEMA comes in, to unsquash as much as possible and make everybody feel good.
So step one in the NASA plan is better asteroid detection and tracking.
Now, it kind of seems important, you know, because we can't really dodge.
You know, we need to see this one coming really early.
Second is improving our ability to predict where an asteroid might hit so FEMA.
can show up at the right place.
Now, third, this is the awesome part, is the asteroid deflection systems.
So if NASA's not using tough oil drillers to land on and kill the asteroid, how do you do it?
Well the plan would be to launch a spacecraft towards an asteroid that would change the asteroid's trajectory just enough to give us Earthlings a good scare and a really good show.
However, we all live to talk about it.
Now, NASA has plans to experiment with this deflection technique with a spacecraft launching in 2021.
It's called the Double Asteroid Redirection Test, or DART.
I love it when they come up with clever little names like that.
Currently, astronomers have only found 8,000 asteroids in space that measure at least 460 feet across.
Now, that would be big enough to pulverize an entire state if it hit the U.S.
But not to worry, that's, you know, something that size,
it's only one-third of all of the near-Earth asteroids.
Now, I told you that, you know, I had good news and bad news, and the bad news is: wow,
asteroids are coming.
The good news is,
when I read everything else in the paper and I watch our society and everything else, the good news is: hey, asteroids are coming.
It's Friday, June 22nd.
You're listening to the Glenn Beck program.
Still,
I don't think I can start with the border today, even though I need to.
I need to address the
press and what they're saying about Melania Trump.
I need to address that.
And I need to address Time Magazine
and what's happening with Time Magazine.
Two amazing, amazing stories.
But
I also have some, I have a good story that doesn't involve asteroids.
This is an actual good story.
Okay.
That will just make you feel good
because you've never heard it before.
Do you know a show you're on?
Do you think you're hosting a different program today?
Well.
You just prayed for an asteroid to destroy us all, and now you're going to tell us you have good news?
Well,
it's not necessarily good news.
It'll just make you feel good.
It's a feel-good story about the Supreme Court.
All right.
Okay.
So this is from Slate.
You know, Slate.
Yeah, not a conservative source.
No, not.
No.
No.
Uh-uh.
So here's the story.
What is Justice Elena Kagan doing?
So far this term, the liberal justice has crossed ideological lines at least three times to join the Supreme Court's conservatives.
Most recently, on Thursday, Kagan authored the
majority opinion in Lucia v.
SEC, a huge case that threatens to erode the political independence of multiple federal agencies.
Tearing down the administrative state is supposed to be Justice Neil
Gorsuch's pet project.
But in this case, it was Kagan who took the lead in undermining the civil service, authoring an opinion that prompted sharp dissent by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who accused her colleague of making legal and factual errors.
So what is happening with Kagan?
Why is she playing nice with conservatives?
What, to put it bluntly, is in it for her?
Given her overall voting pattern, which remains progressive, it seems unlikely that she's politically drifting.
It is possible, though, that these defections are tactical maneuvers, efforts to build a moderate coalition and keep the court from veering rapidly to the right.
Keep believing that.
Kagan isn't losing the battle
to win the war.
She's wrestling the court's far-right justices to a draw in order to forestall disaster.
And so far, she's been surprisingly successful to the occasional annoyance of her usual allies.
Now, this goes on and on and on and on and on,
and it shows what she has been ruling and doing, and it's not good for the liberal side.
And it just makes me happy.
Oh,
because this never happens.
Well, it never happens to happen.
It never happens to conservatives.
Of course not.
It's always the liberals that drift.
It's always us that become liberal on the Supreme Court.
Always.
It never has happened.
Go back to, I mean, even NPR featured this meltdown of mine in the middle of when
the Obamacare decision came down.
We were live on the air and all the
conservative sites started saying, oh, we won, we won, we won.
And I was like, wait a minute, I'm reading
the ruling.
And it's like, no, we did not win this.
Obamacare was not overturned.
And then I read that it was Roberts.
Remember this?
Yes.
And I started screaming, this never happens to them.
It's always our guy who looks conservative and then all of a sudden turns into someone who lets you down all the time.
Okay, so wait, so wait.
But if you remember that same show,
what happened right after?
People started calling and saying, let me quote this.
It's possible that this defection is a tactical maneuver.
Oh my God.
Yeah, we got hit with that over and over again.
Right?
Yeah.
No, no, no.
He has a plan.
He's tricking.
That's right.
This just makes me so happy.
At least finally something like this happens to the left a little bit.
Now, again, the same thing with Roberts.
Roberts' general voting record is relatively conservative.
He's just let down conservatives on multiple massive cases.
And, you know, I don't think Kagan's to that level yet.
No.
But we've noted it several times.
Kagan has sided with relatively sane principles a few times.
And this is much better than you normally get from the left.
The Democrats never miss on these picks.
Listen to this.
In the masterpiece cake shop in Colorado Civil Rights Commission, Kagan performed a similar sleight of hand.
They're just going.
They're just going.
She's tricking them.
I'm telling you, she's tricking them.
The case revolved around same-sex couples, blah, blah, blah.
Supreme Court 7-2 decision ducked the question entirely, ruling instead that the Colorado Civil Rights Commission.
I'm sorry.
I just, oh my God, you're boring.
Have you listened to me?
Have you listened to me?
I'm boring myself to death.
They had expressed impermissible hostility toward religion while handling the case.
Kagan,
along with Justice Stephen Breyer, joined the court's opinion in full.
Kagan also deployed a spin on this technique in Gill v.
Whitford, a challenge to partisan gerrymandering.
Not all of Kagan's right-leaning votes reflect an obvious behind-the-scenes compromise.
I mean, I am more receptive to this analysis with someone on the left because I don't believe nice things happen.
So it's hard for me to actually internalize the idea that Elena Kagan is going to wind up to be a moderate justice, let's just say, on the Supreme Court.
I don't really think that's going to happen, but it is nice to see them struggling through this moment a little bit.
It is nice to occasionally see it.
I think they're struggling.
I think this is why they're all so desperate.
I think, you know, what you're watching in the media, and oh, we're going to get to the
First Lady's coat
in just a minute.
And we're also, oh, going to get to Time magazine.
But all of these things, it's desperation.
It's absolute desperation.
Why would you go after her coat?
Why would you Photoshop a cover of Time magazine,
exploit a kid, and then
within two days, no, it's revealed that that's absolutely not true.
That child was never separated.
That is nothing to do with the story.
Incredible.
Okay, why would you do that?
Why would you do that?
Because you're so desperate.
They are throwing everything.
And I got news for you.
He's going to survive this.
He's going to survive this.
And he may come out stronger in comparison because the media is going to come out much weaker, much weaker, because they are not playing
fair.
And I don't mean fair.
I mean, because they've never been fair.
They're just not.
There's a line that's crazy.
They're crossing a massive line.
I mean, this is a good example of it.
We talked about how there's certain issues where they just cross this line and they become advocates.
Yes.
An advocate makes a mistake like this, Right.
You know, a media matters, a think progress.
They make mistakes like this all the time.
And they don't care.
Because they're an advocacy group.
Correct.
Right?
Correct.
CNN is not supposed to get, it's not supposed to tell you that this, here is the ultimate example.
Here is the Vietnamese girl running away from the napalm of what's happening right now.
This is the iconic photo.
And then we find out from the girl's dad that the iconic photo is of a girl who was not separated from her parents, that
the dad didn't want them to go, that the mom seemingly abandoned the other kids back at home, and that nothing of the sort happened.
You know, kids cry over all sorts of reasons.
When I want to leave Chuck E.
Cheese, the kids cry.
Yeah.
Well, this one was because the mom was with human smugglers on a boat.
taking her little child in the middle of the night, and the border patrol pulls up next to them in their boat.
Of course, that child is crying.
Of course.
Of course.
It's a really bad situation.
Right.
But, you know,
a kid crying in and of itself is not a news story.
Happens all the time.
If you have kids of this age, you've seen it.
You see it every day, right?
The issue here is who's to blame?
It's not just getting a picture of a kid crying.
Anybody can do that.
The point is, it's supposed to tell a story about how evil the U.S.
government is.
It told the exact opposite story, and they ran with it for multiple days until now they can move on to the coat when we find out the truth about it.
Now they can start talking coat.
They can go fashion talk for a few days until we find out the truth about that, whatever that is.
Okay, so here's the thing.
They are in full-fledged panic.
And I'm telling you, I do not believe that the Democrats are going to have a good midterm election.
They're not.
They're going to have all of their anarchists and all of their Marxists and everybody else turn out.
But I will tell you, the average American, I think, is growing weary of this.
And here's why.
It's beginning to be too close to home.
It's happening in your schools.
You're seeing it with your kids.
You're seeing what's happening on the college campuses.
You're seeing what's happening with Twitter.
You're seeing it happen where
everybody is just at each other's throats.
People, the average person does believe there is truth.
They do believe, what is it, 70%
of Democrats believe there is a limit on abortion.
Well, there is no limit on anything anymore.
And the press is dishonoring and discrediting itself.
The American people...
Usually it's their arrogance.
And I think it still is the arrogance of the press and and the arrogance of the Democrats.
But it is the panic that is happening now.
This just panic.
We've got to stop this at all costs.
And it's beginning to slip away from them and they feel it.
Now they're going to get dangerous.
And we're seeing that the press is.
Once the press crosses this line, which they have crossed now.
Think of the lines that they have crossed Just this week,
two weeks ago, they started putting out a photo.
We found out quickly that that photo was not real, but they saw how fast that lit up the internet.
That's the only reason, the only reason why they started looking into this story because they saw and they were humiliated that this was an old photograph of children in cages.
They were humiliated and they were like, oh yeah, well, go find it because those do exist.
They did.
They did it because they were humiliated and they saw that this was a wildfire waiting to happen on their side.
So they went and they did their job.
But the problem is their job should have been done five years ago, six years ago.
They never did it.
Now they are just dogpiling.
and it is incredible to watch.
You are watching history.
It is
the bonfire of the vanities.
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Charles Krauthammer died yesterday.
Charles.
Charles is a, is,
he was just an amazing, amazing man.
Do we have the clip from Fox News and
what he said about how he wanted to die?
Listen to this.
It's my job to call a folly a folly.
Charles Krauthammer, columnist, author, and Fox News commentator, lived his life telling others exactly what he thought.
You're betraying your whole life if you don't say what you think and you don't say it honestly and bluntly.
Do you think you'll ever stop writing?
No, I intend to die at my desk.
Really?
I would like to.
I'm not sure I can arrange it.
He was
really, truly remarkable.
He fought against all of the odds and stood straighter, a man in a wheelchair that stood straighter and had more spine
than almost all of us in conservative media combined.
This is the Glen Beck program.
I want to cut through all of the smoke and the outrage and everything else about what is
what the media is telling us is important about what's happening on the border
and
get away from all of that
and give you maybe another perspective
of why
we need security.
And it's,
God help us, it's not because of the people, it's because of what's going on in Mexico right now that we refuse to look at.
And it's happening every
day.
It's three o'clock in the morning and the air is a little chilly and bitter as Pamela Tiran leaves Bar Yardin.
It's a restaurant in a bar in the middle of the town.
She steps out into the empty plaza.
The sun isn't going to begin rising for about three hours, and Pamela is enjoying a festive night before the elections bring higher tensions.
She's running for the town council as the member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party.
She feels at home here in Mexico
in an indigenous little town in the southwest corner of the country, a brief car ride from the ocean.
Pamela has black hair, a kind-hearted smile.
Bracelets adorn her arm, and she wears a modest, hand-stitched dress in an elaborate and colorful design.
A design you really could only find right there.
She's with her friend, photojournalist Maria Del Sol, and a man, her bodyguard, who's also her driver.
The world around her is mostly quiet.
Tree frogs whistle, croak, ribbit, and grunt.
In the distance, a spider monkey wails out its strange call.
In the daylight, this place is paradise.
Cornfields weave into forests.
Ancestral homes sprawl to the railroad past the farm with cows and pigs and goats and chickens.
Last year, The region was struck by one of the earthquakes in Mexico, one of the most deadly in the last century.
Pamela at the time appeared on television asking for volunteers.
The video is eerie with her standing in the dark as floodlights shine into the rubble, people frantically searching for life or bodies as she looks into the camera.
Please, we need more people to help us, she said.
Please.
She was a doctor by profession.
She was also an activist who ran organizations for the dispossessed.
Two years ago, she was a candidate for mayor.
Maybe.
Maybe she's thinking about all of this as she crosses the plaza to her car, unaware of the cloaked figures waiting for her in the darkness.
Inside the car, they pause, stung by a strange feeling, something ominous and sudden.
But before they can react, the gunfire begins.
The killers empty their clips and then shove in another.
They make sure no one is left alive.
And then they vanish.
Back into the darkness and night.
On Monday, the military helicopters watched over the funeral.
At least a thousand people attended.
The details of Pamela's death are still spare.
Officials admit that it may have been gang-related as her father, Juan, has a criminal record and allege relations with the local cartel.
But either way, her death is a far more ominous trend taking over the country just to our south.
Since last September, over 110 electoral candidates have been murdered throughout Mexico.
In the 24 hours before Pamela's death alone, Armed civilians murdered two women politicians a few hours northwest.
The two women had been rammed into a ditch late at night and executed.
In the morning, police uncovered the bodies.
The vehicle had been abandoned and nothing had been stolen from the women or the car, so police realized it wasn't a robbery.
Mexico is on the verge of presidential elections.
They begin July 1st.
And the drug gangs have been murdering their way into the race, from City Hall all the way up.
Crime bosses have have implanted their own batch of politicians, people who can be paid enough to stay out of the way.
Criminal gangs rove the country, eliminating any reformers or any dissenters.
Journalists in Mexico are now dying at an alarming rate, a historical high.
So it's often hard to tell for sure what happens, because now,
people just vanish in the dark at night
with the sound and the croaks and the whistle of the tree frogs.
But the warring drug cartels are growing in strength and getting bolder by the day, bringing their culture of death to every corner of the country.
And we sit here, oblivious, wondering why
are so many people trying to get across our border.
We need to have adult conversations
and not this pointing of fingers and yelling about what somebody was wearing as they were going up onto an airplane
and start paying attention to what it, what evil is just across our border.
Why are people
coming here?
There's several reasons.
Some of it is just because of the chaos.
Others, it's because they can cause chaos here.
We need to start coming together.
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All right, there's a
couple of things.
You're going to find this surprise.
Surprise.
California is full of psychopaths, ranks second in the nation of psychopaths.
Who would have seen that coming?
Let's talk a little bit about the jacket and Melania Trump.
There's just a lot to say here.
First of all, I believe it's a $30 jacket.
I don't think it means anything.
If it means anything, it is a message to the press.
She only wore it going up and down the stairs in Washington.
She didn't wear it in Texas.
She wore it in Washington.
And those are both their explanations.
A, it didn't mean anything.
B, it meant something to the press.
They've said both of those things, which is
the only things that make sense.
The only things that make sense.
So let me ask you this, because you're Mr.
Fashionista over here.
You're basically a Kardashian.
No, I'm not.
Like,
the case they were making on the news about this is Melania Trump's a model.
Fashion, very important to her.
There's no way that this was just a jacket she put on.
It had to be a message to someone.
Had to be.
It couldn't have been something that she takes to run.
I actually believe that it is not a jacket she just put on.
But I believe it goes to nothing to do with the border.
It has everything to do the last time she flew Air Force One or whatever they call it whenever the president's not on it.
When she flew to Texas, it was for the hurricane.
And what did the press do?
They went after her for her shoes.
They've gone after her on absolutely everything.
They have treated her abysmally.
treated her just,
it's awful what they have done to her.
They would have never done this to any other first lady.
She has stayed out of it.
She hasn't talked politics.
And when she has,
she came out against her husband on this.
Okay, she's been the invisible woman.
They called her all kinds of names because she wouldn't come out.
So she does come out and say, look, you know, I'm an immigrant.
You know, we've got to change this policy.
So she stands against her husband.
And the last time she went down to Texas, they mocked her for her shoes.
I happen to believe
she's not a stupid woman.
The people around her are not stupid.
Nobody said, hey, Melania, don't wear that.
That is possible.
That is possible that she's like, let's just go.
And I just grab this jacket.
There's a green jacket upstairs.
Just grab it.
She wasn't thinking, just grab it because it's raining in Washington.
I need just a jacket so I can go from car to the plane.
Okay?
That happens.
She wasn't thinking about it.
That is logical and reasonable, but it is also logical and reasonable that she got on that plane with
her butt facing the press and that message, I don't care.
I don't care about what
you say.
I don't care.
I think that's reasonable.
What's not reasonable is a woman who comes out for the very first time as first lady and speaks about policy and takes on her husband
and is an immigrant herself.
What's not reasonable is that she wore that jacket to make a statement about how she doesn't care about the people on the border.
It's the one thing we basically know is true.
We know that.
You could, you'll never know the heart of somebody, so I'd have to say it's 99%
sure, but
there's just no way she's not that person, right?
Because if she
you have to be a despicable human being to do that, yeah, and if you're that despicable human being, you're certainly not making the trip to the border, correct?
There's no reason for she doesn't get involved in this stuff, so why would she stick her neck out?
Uh, and if you are a person who can't stand immigrants, the last thing you do is wear a shirt that says you can't stand immigrants, right?
I mean, it makes absolutely no sense her being an immigrant anyway, and none of it makes sense, and but yet yet the media is completely embracing it.
Their idea is
they think they've got them.
And look at this huge faux pas.
She wore a jacket that said she didn't care.
And it just shows what the administration is.
And she obviously just doesn't actually care about this.
And it's like, come on.
They're all pretending.
They're all pretending to believe that's what she wanted to do.
And they know she didn't actually mean that.
You can say it's a bad for optics.
You can say those sorts of criticisms are fine.
But I mean, we all know she didn't mean she doesn't care about immigrants.
We all know that.
And they're all on television pretending
that they think it was true.
Now, here's what you could say.
And this would be a reasonable thing to say on the other side.
This is the problem with the Trump administration.
They go to do something, and it can be a clear victory.
And it is always followed with a bullet in their foot.
If there's several times that Donald Trump has done something, it's good.
And then he goes on TV the next day and says something stupid, or he tweets something stupid, and you're like, what?
Just take the victory lap, man.
Take the victory lap.
Here was something where she was compassionate.
She was on the right side.
She's going to the border.
She's sitting with the kids.
There's nothing you can say.
It's all good.
And they give you that.
Yeah.
And it's funny because
the claim is: if she didn't wear this jacket, all we would have been doing is praising her.
You know what?
No, you would have found something else.
You would have found something else you didn't like about this one.
Or you would have ignored it.
This one was easy.
Yeah, there's no, there shouldn't have been, there shouldn't have been a loss here.
They would have just ignored it.
If she went down there and saw the,
or they would have said, look, she's going and Donald Trump won't even go.
Like they would have thrown it away to be critical.
So it's not, we can't act as if it would have been a huge win in the media because, of course, there are no wins in the media for the Trump administration.
That being said, it is, there's a silly sort of, I don't know.
I mean,
you should see that coming, right?
Someone should say, hey, there's going to be a problem here with optics.
Why hand this to them?
But think of it this way.
Think of it the way the press and Donald Trump look at this right now.
This is a zero-sum game.
There's only going to be one of them standing at the end.
I think they both feel this way.
It's either us or him.
It's either me or them.
And they both think they're going to win.
And
so they are just
each of them just going for it.
Who actually
wins here?
Who actually wins here?
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I mean, with the regular people, I think Melania wins.
Because I think regular people, reasonable people who are not all ratcheted up, look at that and go, there's no way she meant that.
Stop it.
There's no way she meant that.
They don't like the first lady to be taken on like that.
And I think the average person knows that's an unfair,
you know, an unreasonable assumption to run to.
So I think that Donald Trump actually wins.
But what they're trying to do here is just polarize us in our camps and keep us apart.
Back.
Glenn, back.
Can't wait.
Bill O'Reilly's coming up in just a second.
We're going to talk to him about everything that's been going on.
I'm really excited to hear his point of view.
But I want to talk to you here here just about
sports, you know, because that's what you tune in to me to hear about sports, right?
The NFL is practically three berets away from a socialist revolution.
Now, maybe that's just me, but they seem more concerned with dismantling social norms and protesting than with actually playing football.
The Minnesota Vikings announced yesterday that they're going to hold a summit and a fundraiser for the LGBTQI
inclusion in sports.
Now, the inclusion summit includes speeches, interviews, panel discussions with a variety of athletes, coaches, and activists who are homosexual or transgender and will be hosted by the team's recently completed TCO Performance Center.
The summit marks the latest in the NFL's continued advocacy for LGBTQI rights and initiatives.
Last year, the league launched NFL Pride in a bid to heighten sensitivity to the LGBTQI community and reinforced a commitment to an inclusive environment in which all employees are welcome.
That's fair.
That's good.
That's what we should all be striving for, right?
I don't want anybody harassed or discriminated against in the workplace or anywhere, really.
But is that what this is really about?
Because it seems like there's a kind of a political or ideological slant to this.
At the very least, it's virtue signaling.
So what is it really about?
Well, the summit is, quote, part of a settlement agreement with the Vikings that they made after the former Vikings punter Chris Klue, who is straight, filed a lawsuit against the team in 2014 for allegedly creating a hostile work environment for homosexual and transgender people.
Okay, so it's a settlement.
This is, you know, this is what happens in corporations, I guess.
Ultimately, the NFL is a private business.
And, you know, as we saw with the national anthem Kneelers, they can conduct their business however they like.
And, you know, in turn, the consumers can decide whether they're not going to keep giving them money or the time of day.
What really bothers me here is this is just strange.
I mean, at what point, at what point does, you know, being LGBTQ or I come into sports?
When?
I mean, if you want to create a better environment inside your company, then you should do that.
But why are you lecturing me about it as well?
We've landed in this place where politics and gender and race
are the lead story on no matter what we're talking about.
What do you want for a birthday cake?
Do you want vanilla or chocolate?
Well, I don't know.
I'd like chocolate, but is that just because I'm white?
Shut up.
Shut up.
It's also worth mentioning here that most people don't care if you're gay or straight, with the possible exception of transgendered athletes, but that's another topic entirely.
This tolerance has actually been confirmed by studies and surveys throughout all kinds of sports in various countries throughout the world.
Even countries with, let's shall we say, a far less tolerant view of the LGBTQI community than we have here in America.
Even people in
those countries believe it doesn't matter.
Why?
Because people are coming to see
a game.
They watch sports to see athleticism, to enjoy the unpredictable fury of sport at its finest.
Overwhelmingly, regardless of the sport, people don't care about your sexuality.
Get over yourself.
Most of us would rather not know.
I don't need to imagine you doing whatever you want to do when you're doing it with whomever you want to do it with.
Nobody's watching golf to muse the social significance of gender norms and sexuality.
We're watching golf.
Put the little ball in the cup.
That's it.
We don't go to a baseball game to meditate on the evils of the patriarchy and the terrors of cultural appropriation.
If an athlete is good,
I don't care.
I don't care.
If they're bad, I still don't care.
It's certainly not a new idea that LGBTQI can perform in sports.
Typically,
what sports fans care about is,
are they any good?
I can guarantee you this.
If Liberace rose from the dead, sequins and candelabras and all, and he suddenly was able to play basketball as a dead, flamboyant piano player, still in the sequins, but he was as good as the 90s-era Michael Jordan.
I don't think Chicago Bulls fans would complain that he joined the team.
I think they'd be happy.
I think they'd be happy.
And I think you'd see a lot of fans that would just be wearing the sequins as a sign of support, not for his lifestyle or for him being dead and risen again somehow or another, just because they're showing their support because he's a great player.
I think it's fair to say that most people like sports better when politics aren't involved.
Keep the politics out of it.
It's near impossible to escape the increasing intolerant politics of the left.
Perhaps we could learn a lesson or two from our friends, the ancient Greeks.
It's no secret that in ancient Greece, the ancient Greeks liked to engage in all kinds of things that included, I'm guessing, more than LGBTQI.
It had the entire alphabet.
They were very fond of various activities, but they also built a civilization of tremendous importance to humanity as a whole.
Philosophy, art, and yes, sports.
When they charged off to war or to the Olympics, they didn't slap a rainbow flag bumper sticker on the back of their chariot.
Their sexuality didn't define their identity.
They were multifaceted human beings able to go to war or to the theater or to the town hall as a citizen because the citizenry was
what mattered.
Personhood, selfhood.
They lived in a time when people cared about self and tribe over sexuality and gender.
Identity was not selfhood
or identity was selfhood.
It was not sexuality.
And let me just tell you, I believe we've heard once before from somebody, judge me not by the color of my skin, but the content of my character.
When it comes to sports, can we now all just say, judge me on how often I score
and not
on who I score with?
It's Friday, June 22nd.
You're listening to the Glenn Beck program.
We have so much to talk to Bill O'Reilly about, author of the new book that is out this fall,
Killing the SS, which I can't wait for.
Bill O'Reilly, let's just start.
This has been an incredible week,
and I think a lot has been revealed on the press.
They have crossed so many lines that I just don't think you come back from.
Let's start with the latest, Melania and her jacket.
You know, let me see where I want to start on this.
Number one, she should not have worn the jacket
because why would you wear the jacket?
You know, you're going down to show sympathy to children who are
confused and dazed and deserve
attention.
And you are a very powerful person.
So I don't know why you would want to wear a jacket that has a message on it.
I don't think the message is bad because I think
that
the Trump family has been attacked this week in
horrible ways, Peter Fonda.
But I don't know why her advisors would say, you know what, let's just play this neutral and concentrate on the kids and not bring any attention to ourselves.
So, Bill, I always put my position in Beck as an advisor, like you.
I advise you and Stu.
I always put myself in that position.
My advice would be don't wear that jacket.
Okay, so
let me give you a couple of scenarios and how realistic you think they are.
One, she was walking out.
It was going to be raining possibly in Washington, D.C., either when she was going or she was leaving.
She said, you know, just grab a jacket.
Somebody just grab a jacket for me and I'll just wear it in the car.
She put it on.
Nobody really thought about it because she was just getting it in the car and up on the airplane in Washington.
How likely is that scenario?
Possible.
Possible.
Possible.
The next one, that she was,
she has a reason to be pissed off this week.
She has been treated horribly by the press.
From the get-go, they have treated her horribly.
They would have never treated any other First Lady like this, with an exception possibly of Mary Lincoln.
So she
has had her son
under siege this week.
She has been under siege.
Her husband is under siege.
Her daughter has been, or her stepdaughter has been under siege.
And she grabs the jacket and she's like, you know what?
I don't really care.
I'm going to wear this one because I just want to send a press.
I don't care.
I don't care about you, the press.
Also possible, but not wise.
Correct.
Correct.
Not wise.
However, this is the kind of thing that the Trump administration does that is frustrating
for his fans and for his supporters because,
you know,
they had a good thing that could have been really good, and he always just tweets or says something, and it just kind of takes that moment of sweetness away.
So they do kind of make these mistakes.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know whether you're aware of this, but on Monday I did a big thing that I said Donald Trump himself should go to the border.
He should get on Air Force One, not announce it, just show up
with the Secret Service cadre,
talk to some of the children, and show that he does care about the kids.
So I know this to be true.
They actually debated that.
But the
determination was made that it would show weakness if Trump went down there because it would show that he was caving into
the vicious press coverage.
So they decided to send Melania, and Melania went down.
So all of that is smart.
I mean, I don't know about the caving to the weakness part about the press.
If I were a president, I'd say, I'm going to do what I want, and I want to do this.
Yes, I agree.
So, wait a minute.
I've got one more scenario.
Yeah.
Out of those two choices, which one do you think is more likely?
The
former that
they
didn't know.
Okay.
All right.
Hang on.
Once she has it on, they have people back there.
Right, right, right.
I know that.
I know that.
That are looking at your makeup, your hair, what you're wearing.
I I got it.
If anything's falling.
That's how he looks like it every day, Bill.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
So there's one more scenario.
How likely is it that she was going on a plane to meet with the kids and she was sending a message after taking on her husband and speaking publicly about policy for the very first time?
And she agrees that this should be stopped, breaking up families should be stopped.
And she's an immigrant.
How likely is it that she was saying, I really don't care about these kids?
Zero.
Thank you.
Zero.
Yeah, that's zero.
Melania Trump came out before anybody and said this policy of separation disturbed her.
She was one of the first people and was the first person inside the Trump administration to voice that concern.
So there's no way
that she
had that message pertaining to the children.
There's a slight way that it was directed to the press, maybe 25%,
but I agree.
I just don't think anybody's thinking there.
I agree.
I just don't think they're thinking.
I agree.
Okay, so it is
a side note mention at best.
Would you agree?
Yeah, but you know, in our climate now.
No, no, no.
I'm not talking about our climate.
Our climate is so screwed up.
I'm talking about
in a real world.
But when you're framing your questions and you're framing your
opinions, you have to take
care, that's the word, to define to your audience and to everybody that this is a totally different press than we had three years ago.
Oh, I know.
Oh, I know.
Oh, I know.
You know, it's totally different.
I know.
This is seek and destroy.
So I want to build a case here with you, Bill.
So far, we're on the same page.
I want to take a break and then I want to come back and I want to talk about the other outrageous thing that the press has done, and they've done a lot this week, and
that is Time magazine, and the cover of Time Magazine.
And we have new information on that.
And
during this break, I'm booking a trip to Greece, by the way, based on your
time.
I'm not sure what you're saying there, but
more power to you.
I'm not going to judge.
Bill O'Reilly breaks news every time he comes on.
He's done, doesn't he?
He does.
All right.
We'll be back with Bill O'Reilly in a second.
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Mr.
Bill O'Reilly,
the press, this is the case
I believe that we can make by the end of this hour.
The press has crossed so many lines this week
that it is
astonishing to me.
We've just gone over the Melania Trump, which is just a line of
just common sense and decency and all of that stuff.
With Time magazine, they put
a young kid
on the cover who was crying, and it looks like they're looking up to Trump.
That's all Photoshop, obviously.
But we find out now that
it wasn't only exploitive and misleading.
This child was never taken from their mother.
In fact, taken from the father.
And the mother took this child unbeknownst to the dad and abandoned three other children.
Any comments on this one?
Well, it's a Honduran story.
And you got to be careful
when you are in those precincts.
But I think you're right on the overarch that Time Magazine, which is bankrupt and will never again be any kind of a force in America.
And at one time, Time Magazine was the most powerful weekly news organ in the country.
And you know, you can pinpoint their downfall when they put me on the cover.
Yeah.
I mean, after that, people went, is this Mad Magazine?
Yeah, this is craziness.
This is craziness.
Right.
But Time magazine destroyed itself by ideology, as so many of them have, and now
is in the realm of we don't really care what's true.
We feel Donald Trump is a threat to the nation, so we can justify anything, dishonesty, distortion,
because we feel he's a villain.
But even more important than that was the story about the special counsel Robert Mueller putting in writing in his report that both the New York Times and the Washington Post fabricated details of the raid on the home of Paul Manafort.
And Mueller himself was so outraged by this and didn't pull any punches at all, said basically, those news agencies lied.
We did not pick any locks.
We did not do what they said we did.
And it's outrageous.
But did you hear anything from the New York Times and Washington Post saying, gee, we're sorry we made the mistake?
No,
because they don't care.
So, Bill, has the media, I mean, we've watched them just disintegrate before our eyes.
The media is, it's strange.
Every time they think we got him, I don't think this is going to affect Donald Trump.
I don't think this is a knockout punch on him at all, especially when you look at the facts.
This has been going on since the Clinton administration.
On billorilly.com yesterday, I said that now this is a campaign issue, that Donald Trump has decided to run for re-election.
He's using the border and his hatred of the press and vice versa as campaign issues.
He believes, and his people believe, that the American public loathe the media so much that the more the Trump administration can attack the media, the more votes they will ultimately get.
Right.
So now it's become a campaign issue.
I happen to agree with you.
Now let's go and turn what that means next.
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This is the Glenn Beck program.
Bill O'Reilly on from BillO'Reilly.com.
And Bill, I want to get your opinion on
this.
This started a few weeks ago
when people started posting a photo from 2014 of what was happening on the border, and it went viral quickly until a few of us who were actually on the border in 2014 saw it and went, no, uh-uh, that's from 2014.
That's your guy.
But they quickly withdrew it.
Nobody apologized, really.
They were just like, oh, yeah, well, my kids distracted me, editor of the New York Times.
But they saw how passionate people had become quickly on that one photo and realized, we got him.
We've got something here because we can go down to the border now.
And surely if it was happening then, it's still happening.
They're supposed to, hang on, they're supposed to be reporting facts, why things are happening, giving us context, telling us what it means and why it matters.
But I believe that they have finally crossed the Rubicon of where it is extraordinarily apparent to any fair-minded person that they are nothing but advocates, and they either don't see it or they don't care.
People have priced in to Donald Trump.
The Raphael Cruz killed JFK.
They've priced that in and they don't care.
The press thinks, well, two can play at this game, but they can't because they're not Donald Trump and
they are going to absolutely put the last nail in their coffin.
They think they're going to win.
They don't.
What do the folks do, as you like to say?
Well, folks are angry on both sides.
The press is not going to have much of a role in the
midterms coming up in November or the presidential election of 2020.
Because everybody knows now, as you just said, that the fix is in.
And they know, I mean, the editors of these newspapers and the producers of these television programs, they're taking their orders from corporate.
And that goes the other way, too.
And corporate is basically telling them, look, we want you to destroy Donald Trump or we want you to support Donald Trump.
And outside of a very, very few people,
Charles Krauthammer being one of them,
the Lemmings say, okay.
And, you know, that doesn't,
in the New York and L.A.
precincts, they're all thinking the same way anyway, because that's what they do.
It's a social thing as well.
So it's easy for them to say, okay, I'm going to justify any kind of bad stuff I can put in the paper on TV about Donald Trump.
And that makes Trump sympathetic in some quarters and will, I believe, help him garner more votes.
You brought up Charles Krauthupper.
What are your memories of him?
I just finished writing my
tribute to Charles for BillO'Reilly.com and Newsmax.
And what strikes me about
Mr.
Krauthammer, and I didn't really have a personal relationship with him.
I did spend a little time with him at a Washington Nationals game.
He was a big baseball fan.
But life dealt Charles a very cruel blow.
He's in Harvard Medical School.
He's a brilliant man.
And he dives into a pool and he hits his head and neck and he's paralyzed.
Well, rather than folding, Charles
completes medical school, does amazing work in bipolar
disorders, then pivots into journalism, which he always loved,
was a radical leftist at one point.
But then, because Charles was not a zombie, began seeing what Ronald Reagan was trying to accomplish and then moved on over to the conservative side based upon his admiration of Reagan.
So, this is a life that should be studied by Americans, that you can overcome adversity, that you have to roll with bad things that happen to you, and that you can accomplish an amazing amount of things even if challenged the way Charles Krauthammer was.
So, that's the essence of my remarks.
I think there's a lot of people that watched Fox for a long time that may not have even known that he was in a wheelchair.
Yeah, and Charles never wanted that.
He never wanted a reference to it.
He never wanted people feeling sorry for him.
He never wanted any of that.
He really was a man that people should emulate.
And that's the message.
And he was so disgusted by the press, I can't tell you how angry he was about, because he did write for the Washington Post.
Now, he never bad-mouthed them.
But I know that he was just sickened by the corruption, and that's the only word you can use that the American media has descended into.
We now have a corrupt institution in this country.
It's horrifying.
And I mean, I personally experienced it.
And it is just,
I feel that America is really in trouble if you cannot get honest information.
So we can't get honest information.
Yes, we can.
I think your program and others on Talk Radio are essentially honest.
What I'm doing on billorilly.com is absolutely honest.
There are vehicles.
But when we do that, when you and I separate ourselves from the corruption, what happens?
The corruption comes after us
because the corruption knows that exposition is going to harm them.
And so the few people who do that exposition are under enormous strain and in danger.
So I said something earlier, and Stu said, you could talk me into this, but I'm not sure I agree.
And that is, I think what we're seeing now from the press
is
just a flailing.
They don't understand the damage that they have done over the last few decades.
They don't understand that the people don't need them, nor do they want them to tell us what to think.
And they're used to being on their, you know, in their ivory tower and controlling the conversation in the world.
And they are panicked.
And they, each corner, it gets worse because around each corner, they think, ah, well, this is going to put us rightfully back
into our seat.
And
as we are tried, you know, they try to destroy us, as we get out and others join us on the online and in internet and and uh elsewhere they become more and more desperate and it's only accelerating their demise
well i think that we can back your analysis up with facts cnn has become uh the most virulently uh anti-trump even worse than msnbc because cnn covers itself with well we're journalists
you know msnbc they're just puppets it's a puppet show over there um cnn well no no, you know, we're a worldwide journal.
You know, there isn't one prime time program on CNN that gets more than a million viewers.
Not one.
All right.
That Jake Tapper, despicable human being,
he's down in 600,000, 700,000.
Wait, why do you agree?
I happen to disagree with you on Jake Tapper.
I know you do.
We just talk about this, but I know him.
And so trust me on this.
All right.
I'm not going to, but okay.
All right.
No, I go back.
You know, look, if you want to go camping with them,
I'm going to get the end this weekend.
No, I don't.
I'm not taking my trip to Greece.
I get it, but I'm not.
Right.
I'm just saying I'll make up my own.
Circulation is down.
Ratings are down.
People are fed up.
They have other options that they didn't have five years ago.
BillO'Riley.com, The Blaze, you know.
And you're right.
They're They're killing themselves and they don't know it because they hang out with themselves.
They don't know anybody in Ohio or Idaho or Arizona.
And those people are furious.
Even the people who don't like Trump particularly, they know the fix is in.
They know that Barack Obama got unbelievably phony coverage and they know the hate directed at Trump.
And Trump could better, if he would just control himself and discipline himself a little bit more, he could better harness that.
Yes.
Bill, let me try to sell you.
I think the distinction I'm trying to make here, which is I agree with you that
the media, it's collapsing and it's flailing.
But I think that what we're seeing now, particularly with stories like this, and I would throw Parkland into this.
I would throw Charlottesville into this.
There's a difference in the coverage when they think they've got him this time.
They think they now are running downhill rather than running uphill and trying to sell America on how bad this president is.
And I feel like the problems that we're seeing now are more a problem with overconfidence.
They think this time the people are with them.
They see the polls.
They see the optics.
And they think if they can just, this time they'll get it over the hump.
This time they can, this time finally everyone will come along with them and realize what a terrible person Donald Trump is.
And when that happens, they seem to overplay their hand.
Well, I'm not sure whether maybe some people feel that way.
But if you look at the job approval numbers after North Korea and the Inspector General's report, they came up pretty dramatically.
Now, it took three days.
It should have taken three hours for Donald Trump to sign that executive order.
Those of us who were following the news, honestly, I did it right away.
I suggested that this was not going to stand.
It shouldn't stand.
You can't have children harmed in any way.
And if a president can mitigate that, he should.
We put that out hours after this was exposed.
How is it going to play?
Their latest attempt is to show the abuse that happens
under Donald Trump.
I think the executive order took the story away.
All right.
Now the story will pivot into the Republicans in chaos can't get any immigration plan.
While the dishonest press says that there isn't one Democrat who will vote for any kind of immigration compromise because Schumer and Pelosi have basically said to them: if you vote for any Republican compromise on immigration, we will cut off your funding for your re-election campaigns.
All right, where is that story?
Where is that story?
So, therefore, you have an entire party in Congress, no matter what they come up with, the Republicans, aren't going to support it.
That's a hell of a story.
Bill O'Reilly.
Talk about little kids in danger.
Talk about poor migrants in danger.
And let me lay this on you, Beck.
I sent you a column, and I'm sure you read it, about the industry of people smuggling.
Yes.
About how much money is involved in it.
About Mexican authorities being bribed to do it.
Where's that story?
These children and poor people are being used by organized crime cartels
who will cut their throats in an instant.
Where is that story?
I think the American people, I could be wrong, I've been wrong about the American people before, but I think the American people are fair and decent.
They look at this story and they know something is wrong.
They also know
that
this is an ongoing issue
and they just want it solved because they do actually care about the kids.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
They want it solved.
Right.
And when you have one party that, for political reasons, will not compromise despite overwhelming evidence that this is chaos and children are being harmed, but we are not going to do anything to stop it.
That's corruption.
And that's what we have.
One last question for you.
I think the Democrats are going to be very, very surprised if they keep on this course at the midterm elections.
It's not going to go well for them.
I agree that most Americans want a fair
immigration plan, and I think most wall, if you explain why the wall was necessary, which hasn't been done, which is why I want everybody to read my column on billorilly.com.
That's the essence of why the wall is needed.
But the problem with the Republicans is they don't have an articulate spokesperson
to get these messages across so that a lot of people who might be persuaded to do the right thing never hear a cogent argument from the Republican Party.
Yes.
Bill.
That's the problem.
Always good to talk to you.
BillO'Reilly.com.
His new book comes out this fall, The Hunt for the Worst War Criminals in History, Killing the SS is the name of it.
We don't know who he's going to be killing next, but Bill O'Reilly on his killing spree.
It continues this fall.
Bill, thanks a lot.
All right.
You've got your air conditioner on, and I don't know about you, but holy cow.
What is it like at your house?
Because at my house,
it's the fires of hell hot outside.
In our studios, it's the fires of hell hot outside.
Keeping them cool means we've got the air conditioning running on overload,
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Glenn Beck.
There is just
so much going on this week.
There was some really big, important legislation that was going through the Senate,
and that all got squashed at the last minute by the Republicans, and it was, you know, to rein the budget and get the budget into control.
control.
There's been some very big court cases that have happened, including one that,
though there's a few of them that really concern me.
We're going to get into those probably, hopefully, on Monday.
But we also have Mike Lee joining us next,
a good friend, an honest guy,
and a friend of the Constitution as well.
We're going to talk a little bit about what happened in the Senate with the budget and also
immigration.
Is anybody really working to fix this problem?
Glenn Beck.
It's Friday, June 22nd.
You're listening to the Glenn Beck program.
Senator Mike Lee,
one of the greats in our Senate right now.
He stands by the Constitution and common sense.
I can't even imagine what it is like to live your life right now, Mike.
Welcome to the program.
Thank you very much.
Good to be with you.
So, Mike, I want to talk to you about the border.
I also want to talk to you about a couple of things that happened yesterday
and
just get your,
just get the lay of the land.
First of all, on the immigration front, the media is going crazy on this.
It is so irritating.
I believe you were down at the border or you were going to come to the border when we went down in 2014.
Were you there, Mike?
I was not there then.
I've spent a lot of time there.
In fact, I spent two years living down there and working among poor people, immigrants and others as a missionary a quarter century ago.
And so I'm very familiar with the lower Rio Grande Valley where a lot of this is happening.
And it is a nightmare, and it has been a nightmare for a long time.
And people are trafficking in children,
drugs, all kinds of horrible things.
But nobody seemed to care until Donald Trump came along.
I think the average American just would like this fixed.
Is there anybody that is trying to fix it in the Republican Party
that can get something past the Democrats, which are just kind of a, I hate to use the term Mexican standoff, but that's where they're at.
Yeah.
Look, immigration has been a very thorny topic.
I was talking to a colleague in the House of Representatives yesterday who said that every proposal that one group would support is diametrically opposed by the other group, and that there are so many many different factions of people that there is no one proposal that they can see that can get a majority.
There are glimmers of hope out there from time to time.
There has been legislation introduced by Senator Cruz and separate legislation introduced by Senator Tillis this week that would address this Flores problem and would address the problem of
migrant families being separated while their applications for asylum are pending.
So that's why my view has long been, Glenn, that with immigration, our best step would be to start start very narrowly.
Let's pass a number of narrowly targeted bills, each dealing with a very discreet corner of the problem, and we can start making progress.
So explain the Flores case.
That's Reno versus Flores, right?
Yes.
Explain this.
This was a decision that ended up making it impossible, illegal, for the Federal Government in some circumstances to allow
for families to remain together while their asylum applications were pending, at least
as was the case with families that entered not through one of the lawful points of entry
but through an illegal smuggling channel or
in some other point along the border that wasn't a lawful point of entry.
Now keep in mind, this has been going on for years.
This occurred under Democratic presidents and not just under Republican presidents.
It's just that it got more attention of late, in part because there's been more border enforcement of late.
One of the real problems for this, Glenn, is that some of the drivers of illegal immigration, some of the drivers of families flooding across the border under desperate circumstances, and it had to do with a signal sent in previous administrations, including under the Obama administration, go ahead, come on over, come on over.
And this idea that we would have almost open borders has created a flood of people coming up and has led to a lot of women and children being assaulted, being sexually assaulted and exploited along the way.
It really is a humanitarian crisis and one that I think our government sadly has contributed to.
And it is, what is horrible is, I mean, one of the reasons why, you know, we
have to have paperwork or now DNA testing is because, A, some of these kids that are released right away are being conscripted by the drug lords to do
you know, child trafficking and smuggling kids in across the border because they know that they're going to be released.
So that was part of the Wilberforce law that Bush signed in to try to stop the drug trafficking.
But there is all kinds of things that are happening where we don't know if these kids belong to these parents.
And nobody is, everybody's pointing fingers, but nobody's actually looking at the human price
of
just allowing kids to come in across the border by themselves.
That's right, and that human price is very substantial, especially when you consider the long journey that people are making.
And when you consider the fact that in many cases children coming with adults are not necessarily their children.
Sometimes they're traveling with smugglers or with someone else.
And along the way, they are subject to all kinds of horrors.
This is one of the reasons why what I wish we would do is figure out a way to establish an asylum process that can begin in Honduras or in some of the other Central American countries.
Well, doesn't it exist?
Don't you just have to go to the consulate?
And that is the way it should happen.
Rather than people coming up unlawfully, we would prefer that they apply for asylum there rather than here.
It is one of the reasons why it is so dismaying when people refer to those of us who think that it should be an orderly process, describe us as somehow unpatriotic or unkind.
The most unkind thing we can do is to facilitate a process that leads a whole lot of people to be harmed along the way.
Mike, you were there on the border.
You spent time.
It is a dangerous place for anyone, but for children and women or just vulnerable, even with the men that are not prepared to deal with these drug lords and other nefarious characters, getting across the water,
you're blessed if you see a a border agent in comparison to what's on the other side.
Yeah, yeah, that's right, that's right.
And another point that's related to that that often goes unlooked, there is a racist assumption that a lot of people use, a lot of America's elites use, which is that if you have a last name that is similar to the last names of some of the people coming across the border illegally or seeking asylum, that you necessarily are going to want uncontrolled immigration by other people with your same last name.
And that isn't true.
One of the the things I learned living and working among people along the border is that regardless of their national origin, regardless of their citizenship, their U.S.
immigration status, they were concerned about their own safety, their own security, their own employment.
That's why they came here, the chaos in their own country.
Why would they want chaos here, unless you're nefarious?
And most of them are not.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Which is why it infuriates me when liberal elites in the United States try to suggest that
this is a race issue, that everyone of one ethnicity feels one way, and a lot of people of another race feel another way.
It simply isn't true.
And it is often true that those most harmed by uncontrolled open borders immigration are recent immigrants themselves.
All right, let me switch gears.
Some things happened yesterday that nobody was paying attention to.
And I'm glad that there are people like you that are are trying to cut the waste in government and the spending, but also regulation.
You were close to a bill yesterday that would have cut a whole buttload of wasteful spending,
and you looked like you had the votes, and at the last minute it didn't pass.
Can you
tell me what it is and what happened?
Sure.
This one was actually the day before yesterday.
The Senate had an opportunity to vote on President Trump's rescissions package.
This is the roughly $15 billion package, you might remember, that President Trump identified as wasteful spending.
And this came up on what's called a privileged motion, meaning we could have gotten it to the floor and gotten a final vote without any kind of super-majority vote-to-end debate.
The House had already passed it.
It was teed up.
We knew the vote was going to be close.
We knew we were going to lose Susan Collins, which meant we would end up, in the best case scenario, with a tie vote.
Mike Pence was coming over over as the Vice President to break the tie.
At the very last minute, another one of my colleagues decided to vote against it, and as a result, it failed.
And it was Burr that voted against.
Yes, yes.
Senator Burr from North Carolina voted against it.
The sad thing is,
he had never even spoken to me until about 15 minutes into this vote.
The thing that he was concerned about could have been dealt with in a different way.
There was no good reason why he had to vote against it.
But as a result of this, there was no opportunity for the Vice president to come over to break the tie because there was no tie to break, because at that point we had lost.
Now, this is, Glenn, this is a rounding error on a rounding error.
$15 billion is a lot of money.
It is a small amount of money compared to what this government spends.
But if we can't even start there with something that modest that this president has asked us to cut, I really worry about where we are going, and I'm terribly disappointed that we missed this opportunity.
Well, he said that he didn't do it because it would have cut money from the Land and Water Conservation Fund, which isn't that the one that is trying to buy up more land for the federal government?
Yes, that's what I'm told, was that it was out of concern for the Land and Water Conservation Fund that this would have taken $16 million away from that.
So first of all, this is a very small amount of money compared to the $15 billion that we are dealing with.
But yeah, the Land and Water Conservation Fund is an entity that, among other things, buys up additional federal land.
This in a country where the federal government already owns about 30 percent of the land mass in the United States, in some states, like Utah, Utah, where I live, it is two-thirds of the land.
And so as I look at that, I become very, very frustrated with the fact that we sometimes Republicans end up defending the status quo, end up defending this practice of uncontrolled spending within Washington.
Okay, there was the Waters of the United States repeal amendment also that was shot down.
Tell me about that.
Yes, so this one occurred yesterday.
Yesterday I brought up an amendment to an appropriations bill that the Senate has been working on.
It was
completely teed up.
It could have been passed onto this appropriations bill with a simple majority because it was germane to the topic we were discussing.
This would have taken down, it would have eliminated the Waters of the United States regulation issued by the Obama administration.
This is the one where they regulate even large puddles and things, right?
Large puddles, dry washes, ditches, even plots of ground that are sometimes wet, puddles that are slow to dry.
These are things that Republicans were incensed about when Obama put them in, and we went, I mean, I remember the shows, we went nuts on this because it controls all water in the United States.
Right, right.
All water and some non-water, some just sort of soggy ground that is wet for a few hours or a few days at a time.
And so, and this wasn't just Republicans, Glenn.
These were a number of Democrats who were upset, too.
This wreaked havoc in areas of agriculture, housing, the economy generally, our court system.
And so in 2015, we voted to take this down.
The Republican Senate and the Republican House voted to take down this regulation.
President Obama, being in office at the time, his administration having issued this, vetoed it, and we didn't have the two-thirds supermajority necessary to override it.
So we had a shot with this appropriations bill to add an amendment to it that would have taken it down.
And unfortunately, we lost.
We lost.
We got, I think it was 34 votes.
29 of them were Republicans.
So fortunately, most Republican senators voted for it.
We picked up, I think, four or five Democratic senators, but there were 20 Republican senators who voted against it, voted to table it, to set it aside.
And that was disappointing.
Why would they do that?
You know, I am always cautious to speak for someone else, but I believe if they were here with us today, they would say that they felt they had to table it because they were worried that it would jeopardize the appropriations bill that we were working on.
In other words, even though this was bipartisan in that
a handful of Democrats joined us, they were worried that there might be some possibility that the appropriations bill to which this was attached as an amendment might be put in jeopardy if it passed.
Well, how do we know that?
How do we know that before we try it?
Why on earth didn't we allow this to go up and say to the Democrats in the Senate, are you really willing to take down this appropriations bill
that funds, among other things, things like veterans' benefits, simply because you want to defend this unworkable Obama-era intrusive regulation?
I think not.
I think it would have been better to at least take a shot at it.
And I'm very disappointed that 20 of my Republican colleagues and the Republican leadership in the Senate chose to table this instead of allowing it to pass.
Mike,
there is a growing number of people that are done with both parties.
There is a growing number of people that just see these parties as playing nothing but games,
and they would like to see a group of people that are standing on common sense.
I think that what's happening in today's world is getting closer and closer to the American people.
They're feeling it now in their own life.
They are frightened by this post-modernism world where nothing makes sense and you can lose your job job for a tweet.
It's not going to last and they're not going to go back to the Republicans because the Republicans look ancient and like they're not serious about anything.
Is there any hope that
a new
almost Republican
spirit will
rise up the way it did in the 1800s and say, you guys, neither side is serious about this.
We are.
Yeah, here's the only way it'll happen, Glenn.
And I assume in your mind when you say Republican, you're referring to small are
Republican.
Yes.
Small are Republican, referring to the principles of the Republic on which our country was founded.
Yes, that really is the answer.
Look, the twin structural protections in the Constitution, federalism and separation of powers, those that tell us that most power belongs at the state and local level, not at the national level to begin with.
And then within Washington, we've got three branches of government.
Each branch has to operate within its sphere.
If we just return to those basic principles, which are not themselves either distinctively Republican or Democratic, they're just American principles.
They're constitutional principles.
They are small R Republican principles.
If we return to those, this would work.
I know.
We could turn this around.
And it's not too late.
And your listeners can help.
How?
Your listeners can help by making sure that every conversation they have with any member of Congress, any candidate for Congress, any candidate who ever runs for any Federal office ever, have them ask about what they're going to do to reduce the size and the scope, the reach and the cost of the Federal Government, what they're going to do to make sure that Congress, in fact, makes the law rather than delegating that law to an entity like the EPA or the Army Corps of Engineers, as was the case in the Waters of the United States.
See, what happens with that Waters of the United States regulation?
In effect, Congress passed something saying we shall have clean water, and
we'll let these executive branch agencies like the EPA figure out what that means.
And then they write something that includes puddles and drywashes and ditches.
That's the problem is that Congress has itself abdicated its own role as being the legislative organ of the federal government.
This after taking over so many responsibilities that don't belong to Congress in the first place.
Mike Lee, thank you so much.
God bless you.
Thanks for all your hard work and
remain standing.
Unless you have to sit down because otherwise you're going to walk out of the room and leave Washington, then you should sit down in the Senate and not leave.
Thank you so much, Mike.
Thank you, sir.
You bet.
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Well, it's Friday.
Have you seen Oceans 8 yet?
I have not.
Did you like Oceans 11?
I liked Oceans 11, and then I'm going to put a period after that.
Yeah, right.
I did not expand past it.
Right.
I've never watched Oceans 12 or 13 a second time.
I watched it at the movie theater and I'm like, yeah, okay.
It's not Oceans 11.
Yeah.
I think I probably have seen them a second time, but I have not felt good about that experience.
Yeah, right.
Oceans 8 is pretty good.
It's pretty good.
Where would you put it in the ocean if you had to rank them?
I would oceans 11, space.
Oceans 8.
No, oceans 11, space, space, ocean 8, space, space, space, space, space,
13
page, page, page, page, page, page, page, 12.
Take out the 8, which I have not seen, but that's how I would rank the first three for 3.
So I liked
Ocean's 8, but it revolves around a piece of jewelry
that supposedly Cartier had made.
And I think in the movie they say it weighed like 8 pounds or 10 pounds, and it's 500 carats.
This diamond,
this diamond necklace.
It's absolutely incredible,
but is it real?
The answer is even more incredible.
Yes, it is,
but it's bigger.
I'll tell you that story when we come back.
A couple things here I want to make note of.
The diamond necklace in Oceans 8 is this gigantic necklace.
It's on the neck of Ann Hathaway.
And it is supposedly
like 500 carats and weighs, I don't know, 8 pounds or something like that.
And it's amazing.
And I wondered, all right, is that, I mean, is that real?
Do they have that?
Because in the movie, what they have to do is they have to get that necklace out of the safe of Cartier underground.
Yeah, because not all movie jewelry is real.
The diamond in the documentary Titanic actually was not the.
That's sitting on my office desk right now.
It's complete plastic.
Anyway,
but
boy, was I surprised.
Anyway,
so
this is supposedly
a real thing.
Well, you do a little research, and it actually is, but there's something surprising about it.
So it's called the Jean-Toussant necklace, and it was named after the guy who was their creative director for a long, long time.
In the movie, I don't remember how it got back to Cartier's hands, but it did.
And so now it's so valuable that
they can never take it out of the safe, and so they leave it in the safe for insurance reasons, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Well, this necklace actually did exist at one point.
It was made in, I think, 1931.
And what's crazy about it is, as big as it is in the movie,
that's the scaled down version.
It was actually larger than that in real life.
And it was made for the Maharaja of
Nanagajar or something.
I don't know.
I have a condo there.
You do?
And it was, Cartier at the time described it as as the finest cascade of colored diamonds in the world.
It is, I mean, here it is.
Look at that.
Wow.
Yeah, that's a lot of, that's a lot of diamonds.
500 carats.
Now,
what's crazy is the, the jewelry that, that is in the deal, it was made by Cartier.
They made that for the movie.
It took them because the movie company, I don't know why, said, hey, we've only got eight weeks before we need this.
Can you make this in eight weeks?
So they did.
It took 15 artists at Cartier to cut this and to assemble it.
It took 4,200 total man-hours to make.
Just for the movie.
Imagine what the real one would have been like.
Isn't that nuts?
That is crazy.
So wait, so did they make it out of actual diamonds again?
No, no, no.
No, no.
It's still costume jewelry.
It's still costume jewelry.
But really good costume jewelry.
But at one point it was real.
It was 500 carats.
It was real.
It no longer exists.
I guess it was sold and cut up.
Cartier preserved in its archives a design and drawing and photographs of the piece and the owner.
The necklace for the film was made in Paris, France, taking eight weeks.
And here's the actual actual design of it with the cut.
I mean, they didn't, you know, that's just the pattern of it.
It's crazy.
It's just crazy.
So overall, you liked the movie, though?
I did.
I did.
It's not Oceans 11, but very few movies are Oceans 11.
It's not the exact same movie.
No, I mean, except with Oceans 11 is magic.
I mean, that's just a great, great movie.
And it's kind of like, you know, I see dead people.
Once you have seen that pattern, it's not as good the second time.
Right.
You know what I mean?
And then you add a really bad script to something you've already seen, and you get oceans 12 and 13.
12, they were like, you know what?
What if we make the same movie, but make it impossibly confusing and uninteresting?
And that was an interesting choice to make.
Right.
I mean, it was artistically
an interesting road to go on.
And then 13
was like, hey, remember how people liked 11?
Let's bring it back like 10%
that direction.
Right.
Let's put the same gaffer
on this one and see if we can get it closer.
Maybe, maybe the same best boy.
Yes.
And that's it.
And that's it.
And they, yeah.
So, and this one is good.
Did you ever see Italian Job?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I love Italian Job.
Yeah.
That was the one that they were running minister around.
Yeah.
I love that movie.
It's, you know, so Ocean's Eight isn't even that.
Okay, you're.
But it's, it's good.
It's good.
It's a good, fun movie.
The The problem is because it's Ocean 8, Oceans 8,
you know, it's it's you're you have either exceptionally low expectations or high expectations.
And this one kind of comes in right in the middle, and you're like, okay, well, it's not oceans, it's not ocean's 12, certainly, and it's not even ocean's 13.
It's better.
Do you think that this is an interesting phenomenon?
Because I believe you're right.
This goes back to horror movies.
The horror movie, the first horror movie is almost the best of the, almost always the best of the entire sequence because you're trying to figure out who this guy is.
What does the guy look like behind the mask?
What does he do to people?
And once you get through the first one and you realize that towards the end of the movie, usually, the suspense is gone as to what he does.
And then it just becomes a chase movie, right?
All the sequels are essentially this guy trying up new crazy things to do, but it's basically the same concept.
Right.
Right.
And that's, I think, the same thing
with every movie that comes in sequels.
There's something charming about discovery as you're finding out what these characters do and where they go and what their traits are, right?
You're learning in that first one.
And then the other ones, you're just kind of seeing.
I'm interested to see how this plays out.
But there are certain movie sequels, and I think Oceans is one of them, where the first one's so good and they can't even come remotely close to it with the sequels.
Another one is Hangover.
The Hangover, the first Hangover is so good
as far as that genre of movies.
And the other two are so
bad.
The Matrix.
Because
once you have hangovers that
intense,
it's hard to outdo them.
It's hard to outdo them.
The sequel should have just been called Blackout.
You know what I mean?
They're just not, they're just, their brains are not even on anymore.
It's just their bodies functioning.
Because once you've had that hangover, if you're going to have another hangover like that,
I mean,
you're probably an alcoholic.
And so you're blacking out and you're doing even crazier things.
But then the movie ends with going, I had no idea.
I did what?
I killed who?
That's not really a story here.
We're just retired and we're driving home.
The Matrix is another one I would put in this category where the first one, I mean,
that is a masterpiece of a movie.
It really is.
The Matrix is a great movie.
And it's been now,
it's become such a piece of pop culture culture now that red pills and blue pills are all part of like the lexicon.
But I mean, that first movie is really good.
The second and third one, they're just terrible.
You know, I don't even think I made it to the third one
because the second one was pretty bad.
I think that I barely made it to Oceans 13 because 12 was just
punishing.
12 was like punishing.
It was.
It was.
It was like,
we're going to punish you with this and see if you'll take it.
We're just going going to hit you in the face for two and a half hours and see if we can make a third one and you'll still come back.
Yeah.
Oh, that was definitely what they did with Hangover.
They were like, we dare you to get back in the steer.
We dare you.
It is.
The Exorcist is another one.
Oh, my gosh.
Exorcist 2, The Heretic, is known as one of the worst movies of all time.
You haven't lived until you were part of the movie premiere.
I was at the movie premiere premiere of Jaws 3D.
Ah, okay.
Wow.
So
you haven't lived until you've done that one.
That's true.
Because I mean, there are movies where you can point to a really bad sequel, right?
You can say, okay, that, you know, people, a lot of people, like, I would certainly say, Indiana Jones, The Crystal Skull is one of the worst movies I've ever seen in my entire life.
Now, that was kind of a fourth one.
It was a throwaway, I would say.
A lot of people bash the Temple of Doom in that series.
And to me, the Temple of Doom, it's a little cheesier than the others but it's okay it's okay it's not it's not like this you can get away you can get away with indiana jones because it's a saturday matinee kind of movie right you know what i mean it's a it's a fun
you know just a crazy adventure kind of movie so you can get away with it being a little cheesy But there's, yeah, you can.
It has a little bit more leeway.
But when it's a classic, because it can't just be good movie.
Like, if National Treasure Part two was significantly worse than part one which i don't even remember if it was like it was in both of them were to in my memory mildly enjoyable they were good fine they were good right they were fine but like when it's a classic it's an all-time classic of the genre
and then you just bomb so badly in every attempt at a sequel that there's a
or even or even a remake you know yeah like the whiz was like
it was appropriately tied titled It really was.
Like, we took this classic and we peed all over it.
It was great.
You know,
it's like
Willy Wonk in the Chocolate Factory with Tim Burton.
Tim Burton needs to be told, stay away from children's stuff.
Just stay away from it because you're too weird and creepy.
And you don't have, you know, there's this weird thing about Tim Burton.
I think he's a genius.
I really do.
He's a genius that sees things entirely differently.
Edward Scissorhands is the closest he ever got to finding heart, but he never can close the loop and have you go,
oh my gosh, that was such a warm
feeling.
I just feel so good about that.
You just walk away going, that was creepy.
Okay, that was really, really creepy.
And I'm not comfortable.
Tim needs to be checked.
Yeah.
He has signed on for the Dumbo remake?
That,
I'm telling you.
I'm telling you.
I don't know who at Disney signed on.
I just saw that.
And it looks magical.
And then it says from the mind of Tim Burton, and I'm like, oh my gosh, this is going to be a disaster
because Dumbo is their biggest heart classic.
There is no movie that is more all heart than Dumbo.
And they gave it to the guy who doesn't, I think he doesn't, he's like, you know, the, the first living or, you know, heart donor.
You know, like, he doesn't have a heart.
He doesn't understand it.
He may not even have blood in him.
Yeah.
By the way, on a related note, if you want a half hour of a bizarre journey this weekend, and you want to escape completely from the political world and just dive into something crazy, spend a half hour or so reading, it's maybe 15 minutes, reading the Rolling Stone profile of Johnny Depp that just came out.
It is bonkers.
I mean, this guy is
on the verge of complete insanity.
And
because of his Hunter S.
Thompson obsession, it's a dangerous situation he's in.
He's in the middle of all these lawsuits
against the people who controlled his money, including his sister and his family.
He's completely alone, alone, drinking drugs all the time, obsesses.
You get the writer on.
It was fascinating.
Yeah, it would be a really interesting conversation.
They said he's made $650 million from these movies over the year.
It's all gone.
It's all gone.
To
what?
Well, let me give you an example.
There was a report that when Hunter S.
Thompson died, he bought a cannon
and shot the cannon,
He shot the ashes into the air to explode them in the air.
His ashes.
Hunter S.
Thompson's ashes.
Yeah.
Cost reportedly $3 million.
In the story, Johnny Depp disputes that, as you might expect.
Except what he says is, I wanted it to go high enough so it was higher than the tallest part of the Statue of Liberty, I believe.
And it actually costs, in Johnny Depp's estimation, $5 million for him to shoot the ashes of a guy he liked into the air and explode them.
And they go through,
I mean, the litany of
the music.
We need to go through this on Monday.
Yeah, it's fast.
Monday or Tuesday.
I know Monday.
We really have to go through the Supreme Court decisions because there's some really disturbing things that are possible.
That, you know, I'm not smart enough
to figure all of these out, but I'm smart enough to go, wait, that's kind of concerning.
Yeah.
On a few things
the government
is handing down from the Supreme Court.
So I want to get into that on Monday when we should get this guy on.
Yeah, it'd be interesting.
I mean, think of that.
Think how hard would it be?
You remember, what is it, Brewster's millions?
He has to spend.
I love them.
Right?
It's classic.
Didn't he have to spend...
$130 million in 30 days, Glenn.
Okay.
Imagine how difficult it would be.
I know people would think, oh, that's not.
Oh, yeah, it is.
How difficult would it be to spend $650 million
and not have anything to show for it?
All right.
Soros may be a sign that more institutional investors are starting to get interested in cryptos.
Venture capital business, founded by the
Rockefeller family, Venrock, also getting into cryptos.
Rockefeller has a rumored net worth of $8 trillion,
which is absolutely incredible because
they have given away so much of their money to be able to reduce it so it didn't crush.
I mean, the family fortune story is fascinating.
Maybe someday we'll get into that.
Anyway,
really big institutional investors are starting to get into cryptocurrency.
It looks scary right now.
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I'm glad you're here.
Really, thanks.
Really appreciate you.
Not you.
Thank you.
You know, not a lot of people say that to me on a daily basis.
And thank you for saying, yeah, it's very nice.
I wasn't talking to you.
Are you going to join us on Pac Ray Unleashed today and come on over and pop in for?
Yeah, I will.
That'd be fun.
Yeah, I will.
Yeah, come on.
Come on the couch.
Well, when I say it in that high-pitched voice, it means not a chance.
Oh.
I thought that was sincerity dripping through.
Oh, I'll be there.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'll be there.
Yeah, because I really love spending time with you.
I love it.
That's great.
I love it.
Glad you're here.
Have a great weekend.
Glenn, back.
Mercury.